TOBACCO: THE WORLD’S WEAPON OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
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Q&A with Dr. John Seffrin, Chief
Executive Officer, American Cancer Society, and President, International Union
Against Cancer
Question: Why
is the American Cancer Society now focusing on the issue of global tobacco
control?
Answer: There is a great need to take action. Tobacco is a ticking time bomb. As cancer incidence and mortality
rates have begun to level off and decline in developing nations, the burden of
cancer has begun to shift to the developing world. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 500 million
people alive today in the world –250 million of them children—will eventually
be killed by tobacco-related disease.
Question: Who is most at risk?
Answer: A recent study conducted by WHO and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention here in the United States found that one in seven young people
aged 13-15 around the world smoke cigarettes, with nearly a quarter of them
having tried their first cigarette by the age of 10. About 80,000-100,000 children and adolescents become addicted to
tobacco each day around the world. In
China alone, about 50 million youth will eventually be killed by tobacco.
Question: Why has
tobacco emerged as the leading killer in the world?
Answer: There are several major
reasons:
First, because
the world is doing a better job of preventing communicable diseases
(such as AIDS
and TB), non-communicable diseases, like cancer, stroke and heart disease
caused by smoking, are taking over as the leading threat to health. WHO reports that by 2030, 10 million people
will die each year of tobacco-related illnesses, making tobacco the number one
cause of premature death worldwide.
Second, The
tobacco industry has been working hard to market its deadly and addictive
products to developing nations. The
burden is shifting from developing countries because poorer nations have few
resources to resist. While
tobacco-related deaths will only increase slightly in the developed world
during the next 30 years, they will more than triple in the developing world.
Question: How much
is spent on tobacco control outside of the US?
Answer: Less than $100
million is spent per year on international tobacco control, compared to the
nearly $2 billion that is spent in the U.S. alone.
Question: Which
countries are most at risk?
Answer: Sub-Saharan Africa, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, Latin America,
and North Africa are all poised to experience devastating health consequences
from tobacco.
Question: What contribution can the
American Cancer Society make in fighting the tobacco industry and their efforts
to market cigarettes abroad?
Answer: The need for ACS leadership
is great. By and large, the tobacco
control movement remains fragmented and local, while the tobacco industry,
although competitive, is unified, global and focused. We are the oldest and largest private voluntary health
organization in the world, and we serve as a model for cancer organizations in
many ways. We’ve begun to win the fight
against cancer at home…now we can share this progress with others, for whom the
struggle is just beginning.
Question: What action steps can be taken by the US?
The first and
most important step is to hammer out a Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
that has real teeth. The FCTC is being
developed under the auspices of WHO and would be the world’s first treaty to
reduce tobacco-related death and disease and offers the best hope for rolling
back the tide of tobacco. The treaty’s
success depends on the support it receives from WHO’s member nations, which
includes the US. The American Cancer
Society believes our nation must support key treaty provisions that would curb
deceptive marketing practices, reduce youth smoking and reduce exposure to
secondhand smoke in nations around the world.
The U.S. is a
major tobacco-exporting nation, and concern for the profits of our domestic
tobacco companies –and the political clout they wield through campaign
contributions—our driving our nation’s positions. (The tobacco industry spends $1 million to lobby Congress each
day Congress meets.) The American
people want the US to be a major health exporter, not a major disease exporter.
Question: What is the American Cancer Society currently doing to address this
issue? How will your new role as president of the International Union Against
Cancer (UICC) serve to strengthen the bonds of collaboration?
Answer: The American Cancer Society is working to do its part. As part of our new international cancer
control initiative, the American Cancer Society has joined with the
International Union Against Cancer (UICC) and other partners to launch a major
new effort to train and support new tobacco control leaders in developing
countries. And in my new role as
President of the UICC, I will be working hard to strengthen the bonds of
collaboration among tobacco control leaders in North America, all of Europe and
throughout the world. All nations must
have determined advocates willing to fight for needed policy changes that work,
such as:
- Raise tobacco excise taxes; this
discourages consumption.
- Make sure people understand the
health dangers of smoking—many in the underdeveloped world don’t.
- Collect statistics on the deadly
toll of tobacco in each nation to underscore its dangers; this will
require identifying and training tobacco control researchers in each
nation.
- Develop a dedicated cadre of
tobacco control advocates who will work tirelessly for appropriate
policies and programs.
Question: Why should the United States focus on this issue?
Answer: Rising rates of tobacco-related disease can cripple economic,
social, and political development in emerging nations. That could undermine America’s efforts to
promote stability, democracy, and security throughout the world.