China Daily

Tobacco’s many ills growing too costly

- By SHAN JUAN shanjuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Smoking-related diseases are on track to claim more than 200 million lives in China this century, a World Health Organizati­on/United Nations Developmen­t Programme joint report warns. Most of these deaths will occur in China’s poorest and most vulnerable communitie­s unless critical steps are taken to reduce the country’s dependency on tobacco.

The report, “The Bill China Cannot Afford: Health, Economic and Social Costs of China’s Tobacco Epidemic”, was issued on Friday. It explores the consequenc­es China’s tobacco use on its developmen­t.

The rapidly increasing costs associated with tobacco use in China are unsustaina­ble, the report said, citing an estimated total cost in 2014 of $57 billion, more than 10 times what it was in 2000.

The expenses are both direct, such as medical bills from smoking-related diseases, and indirect, such as costs incurred from accidents, like fires, caused by smoking.

The report demonstrat­es tobacco control saves lives and is a developmen­tal issue as well, Bernhard Sch wart land er, WHO China Representa­tive, said at its presentati­on.

China has constantly worked to curb public smoking in particular, for example by making local laws and regulation­s that ban smoking in indoor public places and raising the tobacco tax, said Wu Yiqun, deputy director of Think Tank, an NGO committed to tobacco control.

Additional and more progressiv­e policies are needed, Schwartlan­der said. Otherwise “the consequenc­es could be devastatin­g, not just for the health of people across the country, but also for China’s economy as a whole”, he said.

China is the world’s largest tobacco producer and consumer — about 44 percent of the world’s cigarettes are smoked here — according to the National Helath and Family Planning Commission. More than 1 million people die in China each year from tobacco-related diseases.

The highest smoking rates are among blue-collar workers, and rates are higher in rural than in urban areas, the report said.

Smoking has a greater effect on the poor, said Nicholas Rosellini, UNDP Resident Representa­tive in China.

“It causes impoverish­ment and entrenches social inequality,” he said.

Low-income families can scarcely afford the high medical expenses of treating smoking-related diseases like lung cancer, the report said. It cited a recent Chinese study that found 9.2 percent of the rural Chinese households were driven into poverty by medical bills.

 ??  ?? Source: WHO and UNDP
Source: WHO and UNDP

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