The World Health Organization says progress is being made in the fight against the widespread use of tobacco. However, as it marks this year’s World No Tobacco Day on May 31, WHO warns that much work remains to be done to reduce the millions of premature deaths that occur every year from tobacco-related illnesses.
The World Health Organization says there are indications the global use of tobacco is beginning to plateau and even decrease. It attributes this success largely to the implementation of WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
The Convention, the first public health treaty ever adopted, entered into force in 2005. So far, 173 countries have ratified it.
The Head of the Convention Secretariat, Haik Nikogosian, says 80 percent of the parties either have adopted or strengthened legislation on tobacco control after joining the Convention. He calls this a very strong global achievement.
"I think we are winning the battle…Yes, this is a long battle. It will take many, many years, but the tobacco epidemic, including in some countries where it was a big challenge, is starting to curb," said Nikogosian. "It will take a very long time…14…They are still taking millions of lives. But, the good news is that it seems that it is curbing."
WHO figures indicate a significant drop in the prevalence of smoking since enforcement of the Convention began six years ago.
For example, smoking in Australia, Norway and Mexico has dropped by five percent during this period. An even more dramatic result is found in Uraguay, where smoking has declined from 46 percent to 31 percent over the past three years.
Nevertheless, Armando Peruga, WHO's Program Manager for Tobacco Free Initiative, says the public health effects of tobacco use are still devastating.
"This year, the tobacco epidemic will kill nearly six million people, including more than 600,000 non-smokers that will die from exposure to tobacco smoke," said Peruga.
By 2030, Dr. Peruga warns, tobacco could kill eight million people, of whom more than 80 percent will live in low and middle-income countries. "As you know, tobacco is one of the biggest contributors to the epidemic of non-communicable diseases, such as heart attack, stroke, cancer, emphysema, which accounts for about two-thirds of all deaths of NCD (non-communicable diseases) and about one in eight of the total deaths. That is about 13 percent," he explained.
WHO says the tobacco industry’s marketing tactics is becoming more aggressive as more people give up smoking. It says the industry is mainly targeting young people and women in poor countries.
The Framework Convention contains a number of non-smoking measures countries are obliged to implement over time. WHO officials say the most effective one is increasing tobacco taxes.
Other measures include banning tobacco advertising and sales to minors, placing large health warnings on packages of tobacco and making public places smoke free.
Source: VOANews.com
Good story. There is more from The Independent yesterday about the way tobacco industry expands profit by targeting young people and women in developing countries. Luckily, we have a landmark decusion of Bulgaria's High Administrative Court approving the full ban in Kyustendil, and pronouncing the right to smoke-free environment superior to any economic interests. See BezDim dot org for details.
Those who suffer from environmental dysfunction to anything percieved to harm them are indeed NEUROTICS!
Toxicol Rev. 2003;22(4):235-46.
Idiopathic environmental intolerance: Part 1: A causation analysis applying Bradford Hill's criteria to the toxicogenic theory.
Staudenmayer H, Binkley KE, Leznoff A, Phillips S.
Source
Behavioral Medicine, Multi-Disciplinary Toxicology, Treatment and Research Center, Denver, Colorado 80222, USA.
Idiopathic environmental intolerance (IEI) is a descriptor for a phenomenon that has many names including environmental illness, multiple chemical sensitivity and [...]
Read the full comment chemical intolerance. Toxicogenic and psychogenic theories have been proposed to explain IEI. This paper presents a causality analysis of the toxicogenic theory .
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC25984...
Scientific Evidence Shows Secondhand Smoke Is No Danger
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Written By: Jerome Arnett, Jr., M.D.
Published In: Environment & Climate News
Publication Date: July 1, 2008
Publisher:
http://www.heartland.org/policybot/results/23399/S
myth-of-second-hand-smoke
http://yourdoctorsorders.com/2009/01/the-myth-of-s
BS Alert: The 'third-hand smoke' hoax
http://www.examiner.com/public-policy-in-louisvill
The thirdhand smoke scam
http://velvetgloveironfist.blogspot.com/2010/02/th
Heart [...]
Read the full comment attacks Frauds and Myths..
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/articl
New study: No evidence linking SHS and lung cancer
http://fightantismokertyranny.blogspot.com/2010/11
Surgeon General's Office Again Misrepresents and Distorts the Science in Report Press Release; Why the Need to Lie to the American Public?
http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2010_12_01_arc
B.S. Study: 600,000 People Die Worldwide From Secondhand Smoke Every Year
http://grendelreport.posterous.com/bs-study-600000
Don’t believe the lies about secondhand smoke
http://dailycaller.com/2011/01/22/dont-believe-the
Monday 26 October 2009
The truth about second-hand smoking is finally out.
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/articl
The New Corporate America Business Model
http://forces.org/News_Portal/news_viewer.php?id=2
Trade In Black-Market Cigarettes: Hot, Dangerous
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Whisper it: non-smokers die too!
Monday February 11, 2008
The anti-smoking movement is fanatical and dishonest, says BAFTA award winner Ronald Harwood
http://www.thefreesociety.org/Issues/Smoking/stop-