Tobacco quitline to be scaled with new warning on packets
NEWDELHI: The Union health ministry will set up three regional telephonic counselling centres in anticipation of an increase in the number of calls after cigarette packs and tobacco products start carrying a toll-free quitline number from September.
A national quitline centre has been offering counselling in Hindi and English from Delhi’s Vallabhbhai Patel Chest Institute (VPCI) since May 2016.
The three new centres at Bangalore’s National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Mumbai’s Tata Memorial Hospital, and Guwahati’s Dr B Borooah Cancer Institute will also offer counselling in regional languages. “The counsellors handling the national helpline speak only Hindi and English and are not representative of the country’s linguistic diversity.
The regional centres will address this problem,” said a health ministry official on condition of anonymity. Uttar Pradesh accounted for 35% of the calls, followed by Delhi (11%), and Maharashtra
(8%), according to May 2016 to May 2018 data at VPCI.
There are plans to link the floundering SMS smoking cessation service to the helpline to give
people the option of also receiving counselling through text messages. It takes a day just to collect the names, data, education and employment status of texters.