UN Health

 

NOT ENOUGH

New WHO report laments failure of countries to fully implement tobacco-control measures

 

 

NEW YORK

While progress has been made in the campaign against tobacco, not a single country fully implements all key tobacco-control measures, the World Health Organization said, even as it outlined an approach that governments can adopt to prevent tens of millions of premature deaths by the middle of this century.

    In a new report that presents the first comprehensive analysis of global tobacco use and control efforts, the WHO finds that only five percent of the world's population live in countries that fully protect their population with any one of the key measures that reduce smoking rates. The report also reveals that governments around the world collect 500 times more money in tobacco taxes each year than they spend on antitobacco efforts. It finds that tobacco taxes, the single most effective strategy, could be significantly increased in nearly all countries, providing a source of sustainable funding to implement and enforce the recommended approach, a package of six policies called MPOWER.

    "While efforts to combat tobacco are gaining momentum, virtually every country needs to do more. These six strategies are within the reach of every country, rich or poor and, when combined as a package, they offer us the best chance of reversing this growing epidemic," said Dr. Margaret Chan, WHO director general. Chan launched the WHO Report of the Global Tobacco Epidemic at a news conference with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Bloomberg Philanthropies helped fund the report.

    "The report … is revolutionary," Bloomberg said. "For the first time, we have both a rigorous approach to stop the tobacco epidemic and solid data to hold us all accountable. No country fully implements all of the MPOWER policies and 80 percent of countries don't fully implement even one policy. While tobacco-control measures are sometimes controversial, they save lives and governments need to step up and do the right thing."

    The six MPOWER strategies are:

    o Monitor tobacco use and prevention policies.

    o Protect people from tobacco smoke.

    o Offer help to quit tobacco use.

    o Warn about the dangers of tobacco.

    o Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship.

    o Raise taxes on tobacco.

    The report also documents the epidemic's shift to the developing world, where 80 percent of the more than eight million annual tobacco-related deaths projected by 2030 are expected to occur.

    This shift, the report says, results from a global tobacco industry strategy to target young people and adults in the developing world, ensuring that millions of people become fatally addicted every year. The targeting of young women in particular is highlighted as one of the "most ominous potential developments of the epidemic's growth."

    The global analysis, compiled by the WHO with information provided by 179 member states, gives governments and other groups a baseline from which to monitor efforts to stop the epidemic in the years ahead. The MPOWER package provides countries with a roadmap to help them meet their commitments to the widely embraced global tobacco treaty known as the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which came into force in 2005.

    The WHO is also working with global partners to scale up the help that can be offered to countries to implement the strategies.

    Dr. Douglas Bettcher, director of the WHO Tobacco Free Initiative, said the six MPOWER strategies would create a powerful response to the tobacco epidemic. "This package will create an enabling environment to help current tobacco users quit, protect people from second-hand smoke and prevent young people from taking up the habit," he said.

    Other key findings in the report include:

    o Only five percent of the global population is protected by comprehensive national smoke-free legislation and 40 percent of countries still allow smoking in hospitals and schools;

    o Only five percent of the world's population lives in countries with comprehensive national bans on tobacco advertising and promotion;

    o Just 15 countries, representing six percent of the global population, mandate pictorial warnings on tobacco packaging;

    o Services to treat tobacco dependence are fully available in only nine countries, covering five percent of the world's people;

    o Tobacco tax revenues are more than 4,000 times greater than spending on tobacco control in middle-income countries and more than 9,000 times greater in lower-income countries. High-income countries collect about 340 times more money in tobacco taxes than they spend on tobacco control. M

 

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