End Tobacco Smoking By 2025

Main Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 10 Sep 2008 - 0:00 PDT

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A new report issued by the Royal College of Physicians says that if the Government was prepared to take far more radical measures to combat smoking, we could practically eradicate smoking in Britain by 2025.

The report "Ending tobacco smoking in Britain: Radical strategies for prevention and harm reduction in nicotine addiction" forms part of the RCP's response to the Department of Health's consultation on the future of tobacco control which closed yesterday.

It says that the conventional approaches to preventing smoking that have been implemented in the UK - increasing the cost of cigarettes, advertising bans, smokefree public places and workplaces, health promotion campaigns, cessation programmes - will only deliver a drop in smoking prevalence of between 0.5 and 1.0 percentage points per year. That means it will take between 11 and 22 years for the smoking rates in England to drop even by half from 22% to 11% - from 10 million to 5 million people.

The report argues that much more could and should be done to make smoking as unappealing and unacceptable as possible, and importantly, to make alternative, less hazardous nicotine products as affordable and attractive as possible. The report therefore calls for the introduction of a wide range of newer and more radical measures on smoked tobacco, existing and new medicinal nicotine products, and non-medicinal smoke-free nicotine products:

Smoked tobacco:

Make smoking and smoked tobacco products as unappealing, unattractive, unaffordable and unavailable as possible, as quickly as possible. Proposed measures include: Existing medicinal nicotine products:

To make this product group as available and attractive to smokers as possible, and to encourage smokers to switch as completely as possible to use of medicinal nicotine instead of smoking: New medicinal nicotine products:

Encourage development and marketing of new medicinal nicotine products that are more acceptable and satisfying alternatives to smoking than current products: Non-medicinal smoke-free nicotine products:

Realise any benefit that smokeless tobacco and other potential nicotine sources might offer as reduced hazard alternatives to smoking, while minimising the hazard to users by: The report also calls for the establishment of a new Nicotine Regulatory Authority, independent from the tobacco and pharmaceutical industries, to implement these changes, monitor their impact on smoking behaviour, and tasked to reduce the prevalence of smoking as quickly as possible.

Professor John Britton, Chair of the RCP Tobacco Advisory Group, said:

"Smoking is still the biggest public health problem in the UK, and a problem of this magnitude and importance demands radical and effective action to prevent any further avoidable loss of life. Our governments have shown themselves more than willing to react decisively to other public health problems, but despite the progress of the past 10 years, still do not seem willing to take all the actions in their power to prevent children from starting to smoke, or encourage existing smokers to quit. The UK has led the world in many areas of public health in the past; here is our opportunity show the world that tobacco smoking can be driven out of our society."

Professor Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians, said:

"As a country, we have a real opportunity to build on previous steps, and I believe the public are ready for strong action. They would support bold government in resolute steps to attack what remains the number one threat to the nation's health, smoking."

Royal College of Physicians

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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