Monday 29 January 2018

One cigarette a day 'increases heart disease and stroke risk'

Smokers need to quit cigarettes rather than cut back on them to significantly lower their risk of heart disease and stroke, a large BMJ study suggests.

People who smoked even one cigarette a day were still about 50% more likely to develop heart disease and 30% more likely to have a stroke than people who had never smoked, researchers said.

They said it showed there was no safe level of smoking for such diseases.

But an expert said people who cut down were more likely to stop.

  • Why young people are now less likely to smoke
  • Quit smoking campaign backs e-cigs
  • 'One smoke leads to daily habit for most'

'Stop completely'
Cardiovascular disease, not cancer, is the greatest mortality risk for smoking, causing about 48% of smoking-related premature deaths.

While the percentage of adults in the UK who smoked had been falling, the proportion of people who smoked one to five cigarettes a day had been rising steadily, researchers said.

Their analysis of 141 studies, published in the BMJ, indicates a 20-a-day habit would cause seven heart attacks or strokes in a group of 100 middle-aged people.

But if they drastically cut back to one a day it would still cause three heart attacks, the research suggests.

The researchers said men who smoked one cigarette a day had about a 48% higher risk of developing coronary heart disease and were 25% more likely to have a stroke than those who had never smoked.

For women, it was higher - 57% for heart disease and 31% for stroke.

Prof Allan Hackshaw at the UCL Cancer Institute at University College London, who led the study, told the BBC: "There's been a trend in quite a few countries for heavy smokers to cut down, thinking that's perfectly fine, which is the case for things like cancer.

"But for these two common disorders, which they're probably more likely to get than cancer, it's not the case. They've got to stop completely."

The researchers said it might be expected that smoking fewer cigarettes would reduce harm in a proportionate way as had been shown in some studies with lung cancer.

However, they found that men who smoked one cigarette per day had 46% of the excess risk of heart disease and 41% for stroke compared with those who smoked 20 cigarettes per day.

For women it was 31% of the excess risk of heart disease and 34% for stroke.

Prof Hackshaw said the increased risks of cardiovascular illness were over the course of a lifetime but damage could be done in just a few years of smoking.

But he said the good news was that those who quit smoking could also quickly reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease.

Cutting down not 'useless'
Paul Aveyard, professor of behavioural medicine at the University of Oxford, said the "well conducted" study confirmed what epidemiologists had suspected - that light smoking created a "substantial risk for heart disease and stroke".

But he said it was wrong to conclude cutting down smoking was useless.

"Those who try to cut down with the aid of nicotine, whether from nicotine replacement treatment or an e-cigarette, are more likely to stop eventually and thus really reduce their risks from smoking," he said.

Martin Dockrell, tobacco lead at Public Health England, said: "This study adds to the growing body of evidence which tells us that cutting down to just one cigarette a day still leaves a substantial risk of heart attack and stroke. The best and safest thing you can do is to quit completely for good."

Deborah Arnott, chief executive of health charity ASH, said: "It's addiction to nicotine that keeps people smoking but it's the tar in cigarette smoke that does the serious damage.

"Vaping is much less harmful, but only if you quit smoking altogether."

Simon Clark, director of the smokers' group Forest, said discouraging people from cutting down smoking could be "counter-productive".

Source: BBC
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Thursday 18 January 2018

Just 3 per cent of cigarette trade in India illicit: Study differs from industry claims

Industry estimates of the illegal cigarette trade in India could be vastly overrated, suggests a study published in BMJ Tobacco Control that found that less than 3% cigarettes sold in the market have travelled through illegal channels. Industry estimates, which come out routinely every time taxes on tobacco products are increased, put the figure at 20-25%.

The study collected 11,063 empty cigarette packs from 1,727 retailers across the country and found varying proportions of illicit products across the country. A cigarette pack was classified as illicit if it had a duty-free sign, no graphic health warnings, no textual health warnings or no mention of “price inclusive of all taxes” or similar text.

Empty packs generated by one day’s single-cigarette sales were collected directly from vendors in four large and four small cities covering the length and breadth of India. Ten areas were randomly selected in each city/town, and all shops selling cigarettes within 1 km of the central point were surveyed.

The study concluded: “Our estimate of the illicit cigarette market share of 2.73% casts serious doubt on the tobacco industry estimate of 20% and Euromonitor’s estimate of 21.3%.” The estimates varied substantially across locations, with the highest prevalence of illicit packs in the Mizoram capital of Aizawl (35.87%) near the Bangladesh and Myanmar borders. The share of illicit cigarettes was found to be much higher (13.77%) among the cheapest cigarette brands.

Conducted by researchers from the Centre for Public Policy Research, Kochi, and the School of Economics, University of Cape Town, the study is the first independent estimate of illicit cigarette trade in India. It is significant because raising tobacco taxes are a crucial public health intervention to reduce health effects of tobacco products and because every time this is done, the tobacco industry cries foul and presents its own estimates of illicit trade to highlight how much revenue the government is losing out on.

For example the Tobacco Institute of India, which describes itself as a “representative body of farmers, manufacturers, exporters and ancillaries of the cigarettes’ segment of the tobacco industry in India, whose members account for more than 98% of the country’s domestic sales of duty paid cigarettes”, puts the share of illicit cigarettes at a quarter of the market. “Illegal cigarette trade comprising international smuggled and locally manufactured tax-evaded cigarettes accounts for as much as 1/4th of the cigarette industry in India. Based on the current tax rates on cigarettes, it is estimated that the government loses Rs. 13,000 crore per annum on account of illegal cigarette trade,” states the TII handbook on illicit cigarette trade.

“Tobacco industry always makes tall claims about how huge the illicit tobacco problem in India is and they have been saying that it has been increasing over the years,” Dr Rijo John, senior fellow at the Centre for Public Policy Research, Kochi, and one of the authors of the study, told The Indian Express. “In several countries that claim has worked as a deterrent for the government in taxation. But in India there are no independent studies to validate those claims.”

The study also comes in the backdrop of a Karnataka High Court order that ruled that 40% and not 85% should be the size of the pack warnings. The Supreme Court, which later stayed the Karnataka High Court order, will hear the matter in the coming days.

Dr Pankaj Chaturvedi, oncologist at the Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai said: “This article published yesterday is a big blow to the falsehood being promoted by cigarette lobby regarding magnitude of illicit cigarette business in India. For decades they have misled policy makers with fabricated statistics to garner sympathy and derail efforts for higher taxation and pack warning. This proves that statistics forwarded by tobacco lobby should never be relied upon.”

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Thursday 11 January 2018

Tobacco Free Kerala welcomes SC ruling

Tobacco Free Kerala – a coalition of like-minded organisations for tobacco control – lauds the public-health friendly stance taken by the apex court while upholding the rule mandating 85 per cent pictorial warnings on all tobacco products.

Pronouncing its judgement, the Division Bench of the Supreme Court led by the Hon’ble Chief Justice of India noted in its 13-page-order that “health of a citizen has primacy” and that citizens are entitled to know about things that cause “destruction of health”, implying tobacco in this instance.

Attorney General Mr. K.K. Venugopal, appearing for the Union of India, said that “life sans health is not worth living and the chewing of tobacco or smoking of cigarettes or bidis, etc. causes irretrievable hazard to health and it is the obligation of the State to make the people aware as regards the injurious nature of these indulgences.”

Addiction to tobacco “becomes the killing factor or causation of pain, suffering, agony, anguish and ultimately death”, he had submitted.

The stay comes on the order of the Karnataka High Court that struck down the 85 per cent pictorial warnings rule on 15 December 2017.  

It was on October 15, 2014, that the Union Health Ministry brought out a notification requiring tobacco companies to devote 85 per cent of all tobacco product packs including bidis, cigarettes, and smokeless items to pictorial warnings. After some delay, it took effect from 1 April 2016.


With this judgement, India has also maintained its global image by retaining the third position on pack warnings in its ranking of 205 countries as per the “Cigarette Package Health Warning International Status Report” put out by the Canadian Cancer Society in October 2016.
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Tuesday 9 January 2018

Supreme Court Sets Aside Order On Pictorial Warning On Tobacco Packs

The Supreme Court on Monday stayed the operation of a Karnataka High Court order setting aside 2014 rules mandating that 85 per cent space on both sides of packets of cigarettes and other tobacco products carry pictorial warning on their harmful effects.

Staying the December 15, 2017 order of the Karnataka High Court, the bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice A.M. Khanwilkar and Justice D.Y. Chandrachud said: "We are inclined to think that health of a citizen has primacy and he or she should be aware of what can affect or deteriorate the condition of health."

Pronouncing the order, Chief Justice Misra said: "We may hasten to add that deterioration may be a milder word and, therefore, in all possibility the expression 'destruction of health' is apposite."

Having stayed the operation of the High Court order, the court on Monday fixed March 12 for final hearing in the matter.

The stay order came on a plea by NGO Health for Million Trust and a senior lawyer of Allahabad High Court Umesh Narain.

The Central government had, in 2014, amended the Cigarette and other Tobacco Products (Packaging and Labelling) Rules prescribing that 85 per cent space on both sides of the tobacco packaging would be covered with the statutory warnings telling consumers that cigarette smoking and tobacco chewing were harmful to health.

The amended rules came into force from April 1, 2016.

The Cigarette and other Tobacco Products (Packaging and Labelling) Amendments Rules, 2014 were framed under the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products (Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supply and Distribution) Act, 2003.

Prior to the 2014 amendment of the rules, the pictorial warning was limited to 40 per cent space of the packaging and that too on one side only.

Source: NDTV
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Thursday 4 January 2018

Yikhum Village becomes 1st tobacco free village in Nagaland

Yikhum Village has become the first tobacco free village in Wokha district of Nagaland. The initiative to make the village free from tobacco (sale of tobacco), was taken up by the Yikhum Baptist Church (YBC) in 2015. 

The effort of YBC to eradicate tobacco selling from the village was laudable considering the high risk of harmful effects on tobacco usage, also Nagaland ranks as the 2nd highest tobacco consuming state in India with 57% of the population using tobacco, as per NTCP.

Speaking to Nagaland Post, YBC Pastor Zanbemo Kithan said that the shopkeepers/sellers selling tobacco were a little reluctant when the church leaders first approached them.

He however, said as the time for revival approached almost all the shopkeepers volunteered to respect the church initiative, came out openly and burned their stocked tobacco.

According to Kithan, 13 shops were selling tobacco, but after the declaration six shops completely shut down and took up farming while the remaining continues their business without selling tobacco.


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