Title: Effective Interventions to Reduce Tobacco Use
1Effective Interventions to Reduce Tobacco Use
- Joy de Beyer
- Tobacco Control Coordinator
- World Bank
- Meeting of Mediterranean Countries, Malta,
September 2001
2Outline
- Why intervene to reduce tobacco use ?
- Which interventions are effective, and how do we
know? - Which interventions are not effective?
- Who are the key stakeholders ?
3Why intervene to reduce tobacco use ?Large and
growing number of deaths from tobacco
- World Annual Tobacco Deaths (millions)
-
- 2000 2030
- Developed 2 3
- Developing 2 7
- World Total 4 10
- 1 in 2 of long-term smokers killed by their
addiction - 1/2 of deaths in middle age (35-69)
- Source Peto, Lopez, and others 1997 WDR 1993
4Tobacco Attributable Deaths in EU Countries in
the Mediterranean Region
Source Peto, Lopez, 2001
5Tobacco Related Deaths in Mediterranean Countries
in 1990Tracheal, Lung Bronchial Cancer per
100,000 deaths
61.1 Billion Smokers Worldwide(1990-1995
estimate, million)
- Males Females Total
-
- Developed 200 100 300
-
- Developing 700 100 800
- World 900 200
1.1 Bil.
7Why should governments intervene?Economic
rationale market failures
- People do not know the risks of tobacco use
- Most smokers start young protect youth
- Nicotine is VERY addictive
- Tobacco users impose costs on others
- second hand smoke harms non-smokers
- children and infants need protection
- health care costs (families and government)
- opportunity cost for families
83 strong reasons for governments to intervene
- Deter children from smoking
- Protect non-smokers from others smoke
- Provide adults with good information so they can
make well-informed choices
9Heavy Smokers and High Prevalence Rate in EU in
1999
10Smoking Prevalence (1990s) and Consumption
(1999) in Selected Mediterranean Countries
11Protect YouthSmoking and Addiction Starts Young
12Protect YouthSmoking and Addiction Starts Young
13Allocating Tobacco Expenditure to Other Goods and
ServicesBetter Nutrition, Better Health
Evidence from Hungary
14High opportunity Cost Evidence from Belarus
15High opportunity cost Evidence from Bulgaria
16Effective interventions to reduce tobacco use
- Higher cigarette taxes
- Non-price measures
- Consumer information, large clear warning labels
- Comprehensive bans on cigarette advertising and
promotion, or counter-advertising - Restrictions and bans on smoking in workplaces
and other public places - Help for people who want to quit
- Better access to cessation therapies such as
nicotine replacement (NRT), etc
17Interventions that are not effective in reducing
tobacco use
- Most supply side measures
- Prohibition
- Youth access restrictions
- Crop substitution
- Trade restrictions
- Control of smuggling is the exception.
- It is the key supply-side measure.
18 An effective measureComplete
Ban on Tobacco Advertising and Promotion
Consumption trends in countries with such bans v.
those with no bans n102 countries)
19 Current smokers need help! Cessation Treatments
- Cessation support from health professionals is
key - NRTs double the effectiveness of cessation
efforts - Quit lines, community support, etc., also work
- Governments may increase accessibility and
affordability of NRTs by - OTC sales, allowing advertising, licensing
- Conducting more studies on cost-effectiveness
(especially in low/middle income countries) - Considering NRT subsidies for poorest smokers
20Cessation Efforts Health Care Professionals
First
Physician rate Greece, Italy, Malta, Spain,
Turkey, Egypt, Syria Medical Student rate
Algeria (malefemale), Morocco,
Tunisia, Cardiologist France
21 Key stakeholders
- Ministry of Finance Tobacco Tax Revenues
- Customs Administration Smuggling, Border Control
- Ministry of Labor Farmers and Manufacturing
Labor - Ministry of Agriculture Tobacco Production
- Ministry of Education Youth education on tobacco
- Smokers Low prices, variety and appealing
products - Producers Profit, market share, sales
- Ministry of Trade Export earnings from tobacco
22Ministry of Finance Tobacco is a good source of
government tax revenue
EU Med France, Greece, Italy, Portugal,
Spain Other Med Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Morocco,
Jordan,Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Tunisia,
23Summary
- Modest action
- could achieve great gains for public health
- without hurting the economy