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Subject/Objet: UN Health Agency Urges Even Stronger Measures to Curb Tobacco Use
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UN health agency urges even stronger measures to curb tobacco use
4 August – With tobacco killing 4.9 million people each year, the United
Nations World Health Organization (WHO) has called for extra measures going
beyond those required by the new tobacco control treaty unanimously adopted
by the 192-member agency in May, including increased taxes.
Urging member states to ratify the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
(FCTC) as quickly as possible to prevent further loss of lives from
tobacco-related diseases, WHO Director-General Lee Jong-wook told the 12th
World Conference on Tobacco or Health, currently underway in Helsinki,
Finland, that the convention’s obligations were not the optimum.
Minimum FCTC obligations include prominent health warnings on tobacco
packages that should take up half the package, comprehensive advertising,
sponsorship and promotion bans in accordance with countries’ constitutions,
and steps to protect people from tobacco smoke indoors in public places
including the workplace.
“One of the best ways to stop youth from starting to smoke is to raise
prices, and an increased tax on tobacco products will not only reduce
consumption, but also raise government revenue,” Dr. Lee said on the first
day of the six-day conference, which opened yesterday. “A tobacco tax levy of
one per cent can also be used by countries to finance national tobacco
control measures.
“The FCTC negotiations have unleashed a process resulting in tangible
differences at country level. To drive this momentum, WHO calls on all
tobacco control advocates to strengthen the efforts made thus far,” he added.
Since its adoption, one country, Norway, has already ratified the FCTC and 28
countries and the European Community (EC) signed it in June on the opening
day for signatures. Forty countries must ratify it before it can enter into
force and be a legally binding document.
Most of the tobacco deaths occur in poorer countries where use is increasing,
largely due to aggressive marketing by the industry. By 2020, the total
number of tobacco users worldwide is expected to reach 1.7 billion – up from
the current 1.3 billion. Increases will be particularly evident among women,
mainly in the developing world.
“Tobacco is not only a health issue, it is also a development issue,” Dr. Lee
said. “It particularly disadvantages the poor, and can even contribute to
malnutrition when money is spent on tobacco rather than food. The links
between poverty and tobacco need to be addressed as part of the broader
health development agenda.”
At the conference today, the Alliance for Global Cancer Control issued its
first public statement, calling for the rapid implementation of the FCTC.
Signed by 30 organizations, including WHO and the International Union Against
Cancer (UICC), the statement emphasized that eliminating tobacco use could
prevent an estimated 30 per cent of all cancer cases and 90 per cent of all
lung cancer cases.
SOURCE: United Nations, New York
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