Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, November 04 2020 - 17:00
AsiaNet
New report from the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction reveals only nine users of safer nicotine products for every 100 smokers worldwide - experts argue global tobacco control must adopt harm reduction to save lives
LONDON, Nov. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Burning Issues: The Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR) 2020 [ 
https://gsthr.org/resources/item/burning-issues-global-state-tobacco-harm-reduction-2020] 
published by UK public health agency Knowledge Action Change (KAC) 
[https://kachange.eu/] demonstrates an urgent need to scale up tobacco harm 
reduction, which enables smokers to switch to safer nicotine products, 
eliminating the smoke that causes death and disease.

In a world-first, the report reveals [ 
https://gsthr.org/media/releases/burning-issues-full ] that an estimated 98m 
people use these products globally: 68m vapers, 20m using heated tobacco 
products and 10m using US smokeless or pasteurised oral snus – showing the huge 
demand for safer alternatives.

However, these numbers are dwarfed by the global total of 1.1 billion smokers – 
a figure that has remained static for two decades despite billions spent on 
tobacco control. Eight million people die due to smoking-related disease every 
year.

At today's open-access online launch [https://events.gsthr.org/], co-hosted 
with Lilongwe-based NGO THR Malawi [https://thrmalawi.info/], the report 
authors show that both access to and adoption of safer nicotine products 
largely remains the preserve of higher income countries, while 80 per cent of 
the world's smokers live in low and middle income countries poorly equipped to 
implement tobacco control or treat smoking-related disease.  

The report [ 
https://gsthr.org/resources/item/burning-issues-global-state-tobacco-harm-reduction-2020] 
uncovers how tobacco control policy at the WHO is being influenced by billions 
of dollars from US foundations campaigning against tobacco harm reduction, 
while misinformation is discouraging smokers from switching to safer products.

The GSTHR's [https://gsthr.org/] live data mapping resource, launched alongside 
Burning Issues [ 
https://gsthr.org/resources/item/burning-issues-global-state-tobacco-harm-reduction-2020 
], demonstrates that safer nicotine products are being banned or left 
dangerously unregulated in many countries – while deadly combustible tobacco is 
banned only in Bhutan. 

Emeritus Professor, Imperial College London, and KAC Director, Professor Gerry 
Stimson, says 1.1 billion smokers deserve better. "Integrated into tobacco 
control, harm reduction could be a gamechanger in the battle against 
non-communicable disease," he said. "Global tobacco control policymakers must 
listen to consumers and deliver policies that genuinely focus on reducing 
smoking-related deaths by all available means." 

Burning Issues [ 
https://gsthr.org/resources/item/burning-issues-global-state-tobacco-harm-reduction-2020] 
Executive Editor Harry Shapiro agrees. "Tobacco harm reduction could and should 
become a genuine consumer-led public health success. Instead, we're seeing the 
start of a war on nicotine."

Guest speaker at today's launch Professor David Nutt, DrugScience 
[https://drugscience.org.uk/] founder, argues that to reject the opportunity of 
tobacco harm reduction "is perhaps the worst example of scientific denial since 
the Catholic Church banned the works of Copernicus in 1616."

Full media release - https://gsthr.org/media/releases/burning-issues-full 
Report - 
https://gsthr.org/resources/item/burning-issues-global-state-tobacco-harm-reduction-2020 

Join launch - https://events.gsthr.org/ 

Infographic - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1325629/KAC_Infographic.jpg 
PDF - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1325630/Knowledge_Action_Change.pdf 

Source - Knowledge Action Change (KAC) 
Translations

Japanese