In the 1940s, a promotional campaign featured a human-sized cigarette mascot known as “Mr. Cig” or “Mr. Cigarette” who visited hospital patients. During this era, tobacco companies, including Philip Morris and Camel, distributed free cigarettes and promotional materials to patients in an effort to normalize smoking and associate it with positive concepts like glamour and recovery. These visits occurred when smoking was widely accepted and even seen as a way to calm nerves or help with stress, long before the link between smoking and health issues was fully understood and publicized.
This practice declined after the 1960s as scientific evidence mounted, showing the harmful effects of smoking, leading to major public health campaigns against smoking and its ban in many places.




























