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Chapter twelve

Smokefree Europe conference resolution on the European tobacco strategy


he Conference for a Smokefree Europe, Helsinki, 2-4 October 1996, with more than 500 scientists, administrators, politicians and public health professionals and activists from 50 countries, recognizing that tobacco products cause 850,000 deaths annually in the European region:

Tobacco products cause a variety of diseases ranging from cancers and respiratory diseases to cardiovascular diseases. The Conference urges all public health organizations to contribute to tobacco prevention efforts in their communities. All national and international agencies, non-governmental organizations, the European Union and the World Health Organization should collaborate closely on tobacco control issues.

The conference declares:

Everyone has a right to a smoke-free environment at home, in public places and at work.

1. All people have the right to smoke-free air. Children and other vulnerable people need unpolluted air for health. Everyone has a right to a smoke-free environment at home, in public places and at work. Communities and national governments have a duty to guarantee that no one is involuntarily exposed to tobacco smoke. They must legislate to guarantee a smoke-free environment in work places and public places as well as to carry out campaigns to encourage people to make their homes smoke-free.

2. There is a wide scientific consensus, as reflected in the work of the US Food and Drug Administration, that nicotine in tobacco products creates and sustains addiction. Most smokers start at early age thus developing a substance dependence. All governments should protect adolescents from tobacco addiction, as they do from other addictions, by using eduction and well enforced legal restrictions on the sales of tobacco to adolescents.

3. The new initiative on the international framework convention on tobacco prepared by WHO deserves the support of all countries and the European Community.

4. In countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) the tobacco industry should be made to comply with the same rules as in the European Union countries. The Conference urges all CEE Governments to take urgent action against tobacco, following the example set by Lithuania, Poland and Slovenia, in order to improve health and to prevent the widening gap in health status and legislation between EU and CEE countries. All international organizations should support politically, financially and otherwise, action in CEE countries.

5. Since women may be more vulnerable than men to the principle diseases related to tobacco, and as they are also a prime target of the tobacco industry, all countries are urged to adopt strategies recognising these special needs.

6. All governments are urged to provide adequate resources to fund tobacco control activities in their country.

Finally, the Conference recognises that the key issues are:

Europe Against Cancer Programme
High Level Cancer Experts Committee
Consensus Conference on Tobacco


Smoke Free Europe - A Forum for Networks - 14 AUG 1997
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