World Health Organisation
(WHO) says overall global tobacco use reduced from 1.397 billion in 2000 to
1.337 billion in 2018 or by approximately 60 million people.
The world body disclosed
this in a statement released on Thursday in Geneva on Global Trends in
Prevalence of Tobacco Use 2000-2025 Third Edition, posted on its website.
The report covers the use
of cigarettes, pipes, cigars, waterpipes, smokeless tobacco products (like
bidis, cheroots and kretek) and heated tobacco products.
Electronic cigarettes are,
however, not covered in the report.
It noted that the number of
males using tobacco globally had declined, showing that government-led control
efforts worked to save lives, protect health and beat tobacco.
The statement indicated
that “for the first time, WHO project on the number of males using tobacco
showed a decline, indicating a powerful shift in the global tobacco epidemic.”
The development, it said,
was largely driven by reductions in the number of females using these products
(346 million in 2000 down to 244 million in 2018, or a fall over around 100
million).
“Over the same period, male
tobacco use had risen by around 40 million, from 1.050 billion in 2000 to 1.093
billion in 2018 (or 82 per cent of the world’s current 1.337 billion tobacco
users).
“But positively, the new
report shows that the number of male tobacco users has stopped growing and is
projected to decline by more than one million fewer male users come 2020.
“It is projected to drop by
one million male users by 2020 or 1.09 billion, compared to 2018 levels and
five million less by 2025 (1.08 billion).’’
In addition, WHO projected
10 million fewer tobacco users by 2020 by both males and females, compared to
2018, and another 27 million less by 2025, amounting to 1.29 billion.
It said some 60 per cent of
countries had been experiencing a decline in tobacco use since 2010.
The statement quoted WHO
Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, as saying: “declines in
tobacco use among males mark a turning point in the fight against tobacco.
“For many years now, we
witnessed a steady rise in the number of males using deadly tobacco products.
“ But for the first time,
we are seeing a decline in male use, driven by governments’ tougher stance on
the tobacco industry.
“WHO will continue to work
closely with countries to maintain this downward trend.”
The statement also quoted
the Director of Health Promotion at WHO, Dr Ruediger Krech, as saying:
“reductions in global tobacco use demonstrate the efforts of governments.
“It demonstrates that when
governments introduce and strengthen their comprehensive evidence-based
actions, they can protect the well-being of their citizens and communities.”
The statement noted that in
spite of the gains and progress in meeting global target set by governments to
cut tobacco use by 30 per cent by 2025, a lot remained off track.
It said that based on
current progress, a 23 per cent reduction would be achieved by 2025 and only 32
countries were currently on track to reach the 30 per cent reduction target.
The statement further
quoted Dr Vinayak Prasad, the Head of WHO’s Tobacco Control unit, as saying:
“the projected decline among males represented that the overwhelming majority
of tobacco users can be built on and used to accelerate efforts to reach the
global target.
“Fewer people are using
tobacco, which is a major step for global public health.
“But the work is not yet
done. Without stepped-up national action, the projected fall in tobacco use
still won’t meet global reduction targets.
“We must never let up in
the fight against Big Tobacco.”
The statement further
revealed that every year, more than eight million people die from tobacco use,
approximately half of its users.
It stated that more than
seven million of those deaths were from direct tobacco use, while around 1.2
million were due to non-smokers being exposed to second-hand smoke.
“Most tobacco-related
deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, areas that are targets of
intensive tobacco industry interference and marketing.’’
The report supports the
monitoring of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target three A, which calls
for strengthening of the implementation of the WHO Framework Convention on
Tobacco Control.
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