Over
5 million people are killed a year by tobacco and the toll
is rising!
Tobacco
use is one of the chief preventable causes of death in the
world. It is currently
responsible for the death of one in ten adults worldwide (about
5 million deaths each year). If current smoking patterns continue,
it will cause some 10 million deaths each year by 2020,
with 7 million of these deaths occurring in developing countries.
Half the people that
smoke today -- that is about 650 million people -- will eventually
be killed by tobacco.
Tobacco is
the fourth most common risk factor for disease worldwide.
The economic costs of tobacco use are equally devastating.
In addition to the high public health costs of treating tobacco-caused
diseases, tobacco kills people at the height of their productivity,
depriving families of breadwinners and nations of a healthy
workforce. Tobacco users are also less productive while they
are alive due to increased sickness. A 1994 report estimated
that the use of tobacco resulted in an annual global net loss
of US$ 200 thousand million ($200,000,000,000) a third of
this loss being in developing countries.
Tobacco and
poverty are inextricably linked. Many studies have shown that
in the poorest households in some low-income countries as
much as 10% of total household expenditure is on tobacco.
This means that these families have less money to spend on
basic items such as food, education and health care. In addition
to its direct health effects, tobacco leads to malnutrition,
increased health care costs and premature death. It also contributes
to a higher illiteracy rate, since money that could have been
used for education is spent on tobacco instead. Tobacco's
role in exacerbating poverty has been largely ignored by researchers
in both fields.
Experience
has shown that there are many cost-effective tobacco control
measures that can be used in different settings and that can
have a significant impact on tobacco consumption. The most
cost-effective strategies are population-wide public policies,
like bans on direct and indirect tobacco advertising, tobacco
tax and price increases, smoke-free environments in all public
and workplaces, and large clear graphic health messages on
tobacco packaging. All these measures are discussed on the
provisions of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
For
more information click:
http://www.who.int/tobacco/communications/events/wntd/2005/en/.
For more information
about World No Tobacco Day, please click
here
|