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WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
- (I)
Press Release WHO/51
(14 August 2000)
ONE IN FIVE SCHOOL
CHILDREN SMOKE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, NEW SURVEY SHOWS
The tobacco companies - facing court proceedings and an increasingly
vocal anti-smoking movement in industrialized countries - are turning
their sights on developing countries. About 20% of schoolchildren in these
countries are already regular smokers, according to a survey coordinated
by WHO in collaboration with the United States Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) and published in the latest, July 2000, issue of
the WHO Bulletin. The survey, which was conducted in 12 developing or
transitional countries also found that nearly 25% of the child smokers
started the habit before the age of 10 and more than two - thirds wanted
to quit.
The CDC's Charles Warren and his co-authors note in the Bulletin article
that worldwide some 250 million children and teenagers alive today will
eventually die as a result of their tobacco habit and that 70% of them
will be in developing countries. "The high prevalence [of smoking] in
such a young age group portends a lifetime of addiction for a large number
of people, half of whom will die prematurely of tobacco-related diseases,"
they write.
The survey, known as the Global Youth Tobacco Survey (GYTS), was launched
two years ago by WHO to obtain baseline data on tobacco use among young
people in developing countries. The project also involves the collaboration
of coordinating researchers in the individual countries. Ultimately, it
is hoped the survey will cover all 191 countries that are members of the
WHO.
A total of 50,207 school children aged 13 to 15 years in this first group
of 12 countries - Barbados, China (only four provinces), Costa Rica, Fiji,
Jordan, Poland, Russia (only Moscow), South Africa, Sri Lanka, Ukraine
(only Kiev), Venezuela and Zimbabwe (only two cities) - responded to the
survey questionnaire. Up to 70% of children admitted to have smoked at
some time in Ukraine, which topped the list for this questionnaire item.
With a 30% positive response, Poland scored highest for current child
smokers (Ukraine and Russia lowest with 9%). About half of all the children
surveyed were exposed to second-hand smoke in their homes.
In every country but Barbados and Jordan, more than half the children
- and in Chine nearly 90% of them - said they wanted to stop smoking and
about two thirds had tried to so in the 12 months preceding the survey.
This finding suggests, the authors say, that "programmes and interventions
targeting young people need to expand their focus to include both preventing
uptake and offering tailored youth cessation programmes." Traditionally,
youth prevention programmes have concentrated only on preventing children
starting to smoke.
Other articles of interest in the July issue
of the Bulletin:
Women's special risks
Tobacco advertising ("You've come a long way, baby," "Mild as May"), is
one way the tobacco industry has been enticing more and more women to
join the smokers' community, up to now a predominantly male domain. Today,
of the estimated 1.2 billion smokers in the world, about 200 million are
women and of the 4 million or so people dying of tobacco-related deaths
every year, about 500,000 are women. Ernster et al. (pp. 891-901) review
some of the strategies the tobacco industry has been using to bring women
into the fold. They also highlight the major tobacco-related health problems
specific to women - associated with pregnancy and oral contraceptive use
for the most part but also with postmenopausal problems (notably, loss
of bone density) - not to mention the afflictions, such as cancers, cardiovascular
and respiratory diseases, that women share with men. Anti-tobacco policy
should, the authors argue, protect women from perverse advertising and
take into account their specific vulnerabilities. Giving women a broader
role in formulating anti-tobacco policy and legislation would be a start
in this direction.
The games " Big Tobacco" play
Six years ago, thanks to the courage of two whistle-blowers and a handful
of anti-tobacco activists and litigation lawyers in the United States,
millions of internal tobacco industry documents became available knew
as early as the 1950s that tobacco is carcinogenic and nicotine, addictive.
Saloojee & Dagli (pp. 902-910) chronicle the ploys of industry strategists
to deflect the public opprobrium "big tobacco" has been facing, mainly
in the United States, since the discovery of these "cigarette papers".
Tobacco's hold on industrialized countries may be slackening, but the
battle between public health and corporate wealth is not over. The industry's
sights are now on developing countries. Enter WHO and other international
health bodies, that are marshalling worldwide consensus - through instruments
like the International Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (see next
paragraph) - on the need to regulate tobacco and its purveyors.
A global treaty
"Globalization" is much in the news these days - as a boon or a bane.
For the international public health community, tobacco is clearly a global
bane. By means both legal (international trade agreements and transnational
marketing practices, for example) and illegal (smuggling now accounts
for a third of exported cigarettes worldwide), the reach of the handful
of firms dominating the tobacco industry now encircles the planet. Tobacco
itself has become a truly global product, with over 70% of consumers (800
million people) in the developing world, plus an untold number of passive
smokers, now sharing with their counterparts in the industrialized world
the risks of disease and early death their habit incurs. Only a global
response that harnesses the planet's powerful legal and scientific resources
can counter this planetary threat to health. Taylor & Bettcher show (pp.
920-929) how the proposed WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
(FCTC), as a global "public good" in the world's attempt to counter the
spread of tobacco consumption, can constitute such a response.
Measuring the world's smoking habits
In its battle against tobacco, the public health community has suffered
from the lack of an efficient global information system for tracking tobacco
production, trade and consumption, as well as tobacco-related mortality
and morbidity. To fill this need, in 1998, WHO and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in the United States set up a "National Tobacco
Information Online System" (NATIONS) for gathering baseline data. From
data relating to 198 countries and territories, Corrao et al. report (pp.884-890)
that in 1998 about 30% of the world's population smoked and that the highest
prevalence of smoking was in the Western-Pacific region of WHO (34%),
the lowest in the Eastern Mediterranean region (22%). Globally, 48% of
men smoke, vs 12% of women, but the proportion of women smokers rose to
a high of 23% in Europe and the Americas. The data also show that in most
developing countries, prices of imported cigarettes have fallen, in real
terms, over the past decade. These and other analyses using the NATIONS
database could pinpoint areas where specific anti-tobacco activities might
be stepped up.
For further information please contact Mr. Thomson Prentice, WHO, Geneva,
Tel (+4122) 791 4224, e-mail prenticet@who.int. All WHO Press Releases,
Fact Sheets and Features can be obtained on Internet on the WHO home page
http://www.who.int. The July issue of the Bulletin is available on the
following website: www.who.int/bulletin/tableofcontents/2000/vol.78no.7.htm
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