Thursday, April 12, 2007

Tobacco tightrope – Balancing disease prevention and development

FRIDAY-SPOTLIGHT: Tobacco tightrope – Balancing disease prevention and development

Published in: The New England Journal of Medicine----------

[THE RIPPLE EFFECTS ARE PAINFULLY VISIBLE: BECAUSE CHINA HAS NO NATIONAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEM AND LITTLE PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE, MANY CHINESE PEOPLE GO BANKRUPT TAKING CARE OF SICK FAMILY MEMBERS] please read more below...

During the past 20 years, as smoking rates have fallen in high-income countries, the tobacco industry has found new and bigger markets in the developing world. One third of current smokers live in China — more than in the United States and all European countries combined.
The World Health Organization (WHO) predicts that 70% of the deaths from smoking-related illnesses will occur in low- and middle-income countries by 2020. Smoking is likely to have a particularly devastating effect on China, where the annual death toll from smoking-related diseases already exceeds 1 million — 2.5 times that in the United States — and is expected to double by 2025 if smoking rates are not reduced.1 The ripple effects are painfully visible: because China has no national health care system and little private health insurance, many Chinese people go bankrupt taking care of sick family members. "With other health problems," says Kathryn Mulvey, executive director of the nonprofit organization Corporate Accountability International, "you've got rats or mosquitoes, but in this case the tobacco industry is the vector of disease."
The Chinese tobacco epidemic will soon encounter some new resistance —oddly enough, from the owner of the largest cigarette monopoly in the world: the Chinese government. In 2005, China ratified the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. To date, 145 countries,
representing more than 80% of the world's population, have ratified this first international public health treaty, which took effect in February 2005 (see map). The treaty aims to regulate tobacco companies' actions, using proven strategies: raising taxes on tobacco products, limiting smoking in public, requiring new health warnings on cigarette packages, and regulating the firms' manufacturing and marketing efforts. China's surprising decision to ratify the treaty has won it influential friends in the global tobacco-control community.
One international program that will be investing heavily in China is the new $125 million Bloomberg Global Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, funded by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Bloomberg has tapped Judith Mackay, a Hong Kong–based physician and senior policy advisor to the WHO, to help coordinate his efforts.
Mackay's longtime leadership in the fight against transnational tobacco companies has earned her the fear of such major players as British American Tobacco, which once named her one of the three most dangerous people in the world. She was instrumental in crafting the WHO treaty, and she will now be able to help Asian countries implement it. Because the Bloomberg initiative has doubled the available funding for tobacco control in low- and middle-income countries at this critical moment, many people see it as a crucial catalyst for translating international law into action.
Although sobering statistics have turned many low- and middle-income countries into advocates of strict regulation, some wealthier countries, such as the United States, have remained ambivalent. Throughout the 4 years of negotiations preceding the World Health Assembly's unanimous adoption of the treaty in 2005, U.S. objections were often closely aligned with the interests of the tobacco industry. "In the third round of negotiations, Philip Morris prepared a wish list for the treaty, and the Bush administration took 10 out of 11 of their positions," said Mulvey.
"The United States fought tooth and nail against a ban on tobacco advertising and sponsorship. It was really clear that a few wealthy nations with close ties to the tobacco industry were holding back countries that wanted to embrace strong policies." Other observers, including Derek Yach, former head of the WHO's tobacco-control initiative, argue that the position of the United States is much more complex. It's easy to blame the conservative Bush administration, "but the United States has always been wary of international treaties," Yach explains.
During negotiations, "there was a constant tension between the State Department, which wanted less engagement, and the Health Department, which wanted more." In 2004, Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson announced that the United States had adopted the treaty without reservation, but Congress has yet to ratify it. Some say the State Department has prevented congressional debate on the treaty by holding it hostage "under review": approval by two thirds of the Senate is required for ratification, but the Bush administration hasn't sent the treaty to the Senate for a vote.
Matt Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, an advocacy organization and partner in the Bloomberg initiative, argues that special interests have intervened: "A majority of members of both the House and Senate are supportive of tobacco-control efforts. That leaves the unmistakable impression that the Bush administration is simply giving in to pressure from tobacco companies." Ironically, many poorer countries that, like China, rely on tobacco for economic growth have ratified the treaty.
When China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, it obtained a special exemption to maintain its monopoly, China National Tobacco, which produces 1.8 trillion cigarettes annually.2 Although China agreed, in principle, to phase out quotas on imports, it also began a radical restructuring of its industry, centralizing manufacturing, limiting the number of brands in an effort to build brand loyalty, and quietly expanding its sales abroad.3 As international pressure to cut tobacco use mounts, the Chinese government struggles to balance advancing the country's economy with maintaining the health of its society and garnering global support.
In 2005, cigarette sales generated $32.5 billion in taxes and profits in China, approximately 7.6% of the government's total revenue. In contrast, the government spent $31,000 on tobacco control. Tobacco remains a pillar of the Chinese economy: consumers spend more on cigarettes than on alcohol or personal care products.
Moreover, tobacco is seen as key to economic growth in the more remote, poorer sections of the country, such as Yunnan province, whose government depends on tobacco sales for more than 50% of its revenues. The health effects of smoking are commonly downplayed in China, even by those in key political positions. Half of all male Chinese doctors smoke, as do some politicians. Even a few Chinese tobacco-control advocates express mixed feelings about promoting the use of graphic warning labels on cigarette packages, recognizing that ugly pictures would mar the packs traditionally given as presents to wedding guests.
At the same time, tobacco-control experts fear that Chinese women and children will begin to smoke if transnational tobacco manufacturers gain a foothold in the country. Currently, only 3% of women and 10% of middle-school children smoke, but international manufacturers are already targeting these populations. Mulvey of Corporate Accountability International argues that tobacco companies are manipulating Western images of independence to seduce teenagers and increasingly liberated women in developing countries.
Such marketing can be frighteningly effective: when South Korea opened its markets to American cigarettes, the rate of smoking among teenage girls quintupled in 1 year, and the rate among adolescent boys doubled.4 Billions of foreign cigarettes are already smuggled into China each year, but recently, candy-flavored cigarettes have become one of the most popular illegal imports.
Public health experts describe these as "starter cigarettes" aimed at children. As a competing manufacturer, China has already responded by producing its own fruit-flavored cigarettes. Western tobacco companies have been eager to make further inroads into China's market. In 2005, Philip Morris joined forces with China National Tobacco to market Marlboro cigarettes in the country. Other brands, such as Camel, Lucky Strike, and Kool, have also been sold. Although foreign brands have garnered only 3% of the Chinese market, that amounts to 51 billion cigarettes per year. By signing on to the WHO's mandate, China agreed that by 2008, clear health warnings would occupy more than 30% of the surface of every cigarette pack sold. It is already technically illegal in China to promote tobacco on billboards or in magazines, and all forms of advertising will be banned by 2010.
There are also plans for a "smoke-free Olympics" in 2008, and some tobacco-control advocates hope that the cities hosting the Olympics will become smoke-free forever. Hong Kong has already outlawed smoking in public places, as of January 2007. Some skeptics fear that it may be too late to quell the tobacco epidemic in many developing countries. Even the most optimistic observers recognize that it will take at least a generation of hard work to see real change. In the meantime, millions more people will lose their lives to tobacco-related diseases, and low-income countries will need to come to grips with the devastation that tobacco can wreak. -------------


Alexi A. Wright, M.D., and Ingrid T. Katz, M.D., M.H.S. (Dr. Wright is a fellow in hematology–oncology at the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and Dr. Katz is a fellow in infectious disease at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston)

Available online at: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/356/15/1493?query=TOC

With inadequate cessation services, what will Kerala smokers do after April 16?

With inadequate cessation services, what will Kerala smokers do after April 16?

Bobby Ramakant

We will sell no cigarettes from 16 April 2007’ said the President of ‘Vyapari Vyavasayi Ekopana Samithi’ – the leading traders’ association in Kerala state of India on 12 April 2007 in a Kozhikode board meeting. The Cigarette and other tobacco products Act 2003 also had a provision of ban on smoking in public places across India. But without quality tobacco cessation and counseling services, how will we ever effectively enforce these bans?

These tobacco control policies came into being after mountainous healthcare and non-smokers’ rights’ advocacy initiatives and are indeed vital. I don’t mean to push the tobacco control efforts decades back. Rather will like to assert that we also have developed a fairly strong understanding of how tobacco corporations have duped young people with deceptive advertising and tobacco promotion and initiated them into tobacco use. So the ‘blame’ is not entirely on the tobacco users. Also I agree that it is not impossible - yet not so easy - to quit tobacco use. Tobacco cessation has emerged as a speciality of its own, and various disciplines from clinical management of nicotine dependence to faith based healings have conclusively proven to be effective in different settings.

Kerala is the most suicide prone state of India. With no cigarettes being sold after 16 April, and hardly one tobacco cessation clinic in Thiruvananthapuram, what will Kerala smokers do? Switch the form of tobacco they use? Experts say that there is a complex and circular relationship between depression, smoking and medical illness that complicates smoking cessation in those who have a history of depression. Depression-history smokers require a multimodal approach to assist with mood regulation and nicotine withdrawal. Nicotine dependence is associated with increased rates of depression prior to and after taking up smoking as well as increased rates of suicidal ideation.

While nicotine replacement and counselling are effective for smoking cessation, standard smoking cessation strategies may not pay sufficient attention to the needs of smokers with a depression history. Psychological and lifestyle strategies, such as motivational interviewing, relaxation exercises and mood charts, assist in mood regulation over and above the standard smoking cessation treatments for smokers with a depression history, who require more attention to relapse of depression and smoking after quitting.

World Health Organization had taken a leadership with Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of Government of India to establish state-of-the-art Tobacco Cessation Clinics in mainstream hospitals across India about 5 years back. But the number of these clinics is far too low for a population of more than a billion people even today. Moreover with documented studies showing higher tobacco use incidence in medical students than in general population, is of grave concern. The challenge posed by the tobacco epidemic is not easy.

Effective tobacco control doesn’t seem to be a reality unless public health and corporate accountability initiatives unite in tandem. As we control tobacco corporations and enforce legislations to regulate tobacco and its promotion, we also must not neglect a vital key to the whole puzzle – tobacco cessation.

With India struggling to even deliver basic healthcare services to a majority of underserved communities, in terms of affordability, accessibility and availability - it is not going to be easy to integrate tobacco cessation services in existing healthcare service network.

It is clear that there is a lot to learn from other healthcare service-delivery initiatives before we go forward rapidly expanding tobacco cessation services in India.

And there is no place for complacency. Rather a sense of urgency has to drive us further – not-to-forget - each tobacco-related death is entirely preventable.


Bobby Ramakant

(The author is a senior health and development Journalist, writing for newspapers in Asia and Africa. He is also a member of NATT (Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals) and can be reached at: bobbyramakant@yahoo.com)
Published in:

The Asian Tribune (13 April 2007)

The Kashmir Times (14 April 2007)
http://www.kashmirtimes.com/feature.htm

The Rediff News (14 April 2007)
http://in.rediff.com/news/2007/apr/14tobacco.htm

Scary Photos of cancer patients to discourage tobacco users

Scary Photos of cancer patients to discourage tobacco users

Bobby Ramakant

From 1 June 2007, tobacco products in India will have pictorial warnings with photographs of tobacco-related cancer patients. Many countries like Thailand, Canada, Australia, South Africa, Poland and Singapore already have a strong warning label regulation. Bobby Ramakant ponders over the effectiveness of warning labels in preventing needless tobacco-related deaths:


Health warning labels, both on cigarette packages and on all tobacco marketing materials, help create informed consent between tobacco companies and their customers and are an inexpensive and important first step in a national health education programme.

146 countries have ratified the World’s fist corporate accountability and public health treaty - FCTC (Framework Convention on Tobacco Control) so far. Article 11 of the FCTC states that warning messages should cover at least 50% of the principal display areas of the package (i.e. both the front and back), but at a minimum must cover at least 30% of the principal display areas. It also requires that the messages be rotated and encourages the use of pictures and pictograms as well as the use of non-health messages (e.g. “Quit smoking — Save money”).

“We have tried everything but it has been of no use. So now we have decided to put scary photos of cancer patients on tobacco products to discourage consumers” said India’s Union Health Minister Dr Ambumani Ramadoss said on 10 April 2007 at the New Delhi summit of CII (Confederation of Indian Industries) and FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations).

Dr Ramadoss further announced that “all tobacco products would from 1 June 2007, bear photographs of patients suffering from cancer caused by tobacco consumption as further warning”.

Tobacco product packaging should be designed to maximize informed consent on the part of the consumer, not to maximize the appeal of the product. Strong and prominent health warning labels, limits on labels such as “slim” and “light,” package inserts containing detailed health and ingredient information, and standardized packaging formats are among the ways to accomplish this goal.

Unfortunately, warning labels tend to be weak in all but a few countries. More than 40 developing countries do not require any warning labels at all. Of those that do, 73% require weakly worded warnings on the side of the package and many of those are in English rather than local languages.

Numerous studies have been done to determine which elements are most important in creating effective labels. Findings include:

* To command attention, warning labels should occupy a minimum of 25% of the top of the front and back of the package. They should be in black and white or other sharply contrasting colors. Type style and size also must be specified to avoid industry efforts to undermine the impact of the warning.
* Messages should be unequivocal, simple, and stark. They should convey both the nature and magnitude of the risks, since studies show smokers underestimate most
risks associated with tobacco use.

Pictorial warnings may also be appropriate, particularly in countries with low literacy rates or where research shows that smokers are ignoring standard warning labels.

Several nations have implemented strong health warning label requirements. Examples include:
- Canada, whose health minister recently proposed enlarging the labels from 30% of the package face to 60%;
- Thailand, which has added the message “SMOKING CAUSES IMPOTENCE” to its list of required warnings; and
- Australia, which was the first nation to require that “how to quit” information be printed on every pack.
- South Africa, Singapore and Poland also require strong warning labels.

Tobacco companies use words such as “light,” “ultralight,” “slim” and “superslim” in their brand names and in their marketing materials. Research suggests that these words are intended to make implicit health claims minimizing the harmfulness of the product, and may encourage smokers motivated to quit to switch to a “light” brand. These words also appeal to smokers, primarily women, who believe they can use cigarettes to lose weight.

These pictorial warnings provide smokers with helpful information on the health effects. Most smokers want this information, and certainly want their children to have this information too. The tobacco industry is continuing its decades-long strategy of trying to minimize the effectiveness of package warnings. The tobacco industry is no friend of smokers — and ironically it’s true that ‘the tobacco industry kills its best customers’.

Also package warnings are a good public health strategy because the cost of package warnings is paid for by tobacco companies, not government. Also this should not be looked upon as an isolated initiative rather has to be supported by comprehensive healthcare, legislations and education programmes to attain long-run public health gains.

Bobby Ramakant

(The author is a senior health and development journalist writing for newspapers in Asia and Africa. He is also the member of NATT (Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals) and can be reached at: bobbyramakant@yahoo.com)

Published in:

12 April 2007: Pakistan Tribune
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.shtml?174961

13 April 2007: The Scoop Independent News (New Zealand)
New Zealand: Scary photos of cancer on cig packs
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0704/S00219.htm

13 April 2007: The Seoul Times (Republic of Korea [South Korea])http://www.theseoultimes.com/ST/db/read.php?idx=5128

14 April 2007: The Times of Zambia (Zambia) http://www.times.co.zm .

16 April 2007: The Dispatch (South Africa) http://www.dispatch.co.za .

Cigarettes not to be sold in Kerala from 16 April 2007

Cigarettes not to be sold in Kerala from 16 April 2007
12 April 2007





(PTI): Traders in Kerala on Thursday decided not to sell cigarettes in the state from April 16 as tobacco-manufacturing companies were 'not prepared' to pay the value-added tax for the products.

A decision to this effect was taken in Kozhikode at a meeting of the Vyapari Vyavasayi Ekopana Samithi, the leading traders body in Kerala, as 'companies, manufacturing tobacco products, are not prepared to bear the 12.5 per cent VAT,' levied on them.

"The government in its April 1 order has said that the companies should also include the tax before fixing the price of the products and we also welcomed it," Samithi state president T Naseeruddin said.

He, however, said that since the companies were not adhering to the decision, the traders would be put to severe hardship as they would not benefit from selling cigarettes at the current price. The Samithi has, therefore, decided not to sell cigarettes in the state from April 16, he added.

Source: PTI

Online at: http://www.rediff.com/money/2007/apr/12cig.htm