Washington, D.C., 8 February 2012 (PAHO/WHO) — A growing number of countries in the Americas are adopting effective measures to reduce consumption of tobacco and
exposure to secondhand smoke. But a new report from the Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization
(PAHO/WHO) recommends further measures, particularly increases in tobacco taxes and bans on tobacco advertising,
promotion, and sponsorship.
The new Tobacco Control Report for the Region of the Americas summarizes progress in countries’ implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), the world’s
first international public health treaty, which requires States Parties to apply a series of policies and measures aimed
at reducing tobacco consumption and protecting people from secondhand smoke. The treaty has been in force since 2005.
Of 35 countries in the Americas, 29 have ratified the FCTC, most recently, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and St. Kitts
and Nevis. Argentina, Cuba, El Salvador, Haiti, and the United States have only signed the treaty, implying they will
make good-faith efforts to ratify it and, in the meantime, will not undermine its objectives. The Dominican Republic is
the only country in the hemisphere that has neither signed nor ratified the FCTC.
“The wide endorsement of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in our Region shows that there is clear
political will for making tobacco control more comprehensive and more successful,” PAHO Director Dr. Mirta Roses says in
the report.
WHO has proposed six main areas of action for implementing the FCTC at the country level:
• Require large, graphic health warnings on tobacco packaging
• Monitor consumption of tobacco products
• Protect people from tobacco smoke
• Offer help to smokers who want to quit
• Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship
• Raise taxes on tobacco products.
The report examines both achievements and challenges in the implementation of these measures in the countries of the
Americas. Highlights in the report include:
• Brazil, Colombia, Panama, and Uruguay are the countries that have advanced the most in implementing tobacco
control measures recommended by WHO.
• At least 24 countries still allow tobacco advertising on domestic television and radio broadcasts and in
national newspapers. Colombia and Panama are the only countries that have and enforce bans on such advertising. The FCTC
requires States Parties to bans such advertising within five years of the treaty’s entrance into force in a country.
• Argentina and Chile are the only countries that tax tobacco products at 75 percent or more of the retail price
(nevertheless, tobacco prices in Argentina are still among the lowest in the Americas). Few countries in the Region have
raised tobacco taxes incrementally and continually, as required by the FCTC.
• A number of Latin American and Caribbean countries approved new 100 percent smoke-free laws in 2010 and 2011.
Last year, Brazil became the world’s largest country to have such laws. Currently, 13 countries in the Americas are “100
percent smoke-free,” meaning they have local or national laws covering at least 90 percent of the population that ban
smoking in all closed public spaces and workplaces (with no exceptions).
• Sixteen countries (six of them starting in 2010 or 2011) now comply with WHO’s three key recommendations on
health warnings, i.e., that they take up at least 50 percent of the principal display area on tobacco packaging (the
exception is Colombia, where they take up 30 percent), they include graphic warnings, and they do not allow misleading
or deceptive phrases such as “low-tar,” “light,” or “mild.” The FCTC requires compliance with its articles on health
warnings within three years of its entrance into force in a given country.
• Very few countries in the Americas provide strong support for smoking cessation as recommended by the FCTC, such
as national telephone “quit lines,” nicotine replacement therapy, and other support services that are cost-covered and
easily accessible.
In addition, the report presents data on smoking rates among adults and youths in different countries. Rates in South
America point to a closing of the gender gap: in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay, smoking rates are now higher among
teenage girls than teenage boys.
Tobacco kills nearly 6 million people each year around the globe, as a result of direct consumption or exposure to
secondhand smoke. At least 1 million of these deaths occur in the Americas. If current trends continue, the number of
tobacco deaths worldwide is projected to climb to 7.5 million annually by 2020. Tobacco use is the single most important
risk factor for chronic noncommunicable diseases, which are the leading cause of death worldwide. Tobacco is also the
only legal product that kills between a third and half of consumers who use it exactly as intended by the manufacturer.
“Tobacco use is the major contributor to heart attacks, strokes, cancers, and other chronic diseases that are now
epidemic in our countries,” PAHO Director Dr. Mirta Roses says in the report. “More and more countries recognize that
tobacco control is a life-and-death matter.”
PAHO was established in 1902 and works with all the countries of the Americas to improve the health and quality of life
of the people of the Americas. It also serves as the Regional Office for the Americas of the World Health Organization
(WHO).
LINKS:
Tobacco Control Report for the Region of the Americas
Tobacco Control Report by Country http://new.paho.org/hq/index.php?option=com_content=view=4457=1231〈=en
PAHO/WHO tobacco control program
WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic, 2011: warning about the dangers of tobacco
WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)
Hotsite on tobacco control (BIREME)
*******
ENDS