Kuwait Times

WHO: Adult use of tobacco shrinking despite interferen­ce

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GENEVA: The number of adult tobacco users is steadily dropping, the World Health Organizati­on said on Tuesday, but warned that Big Tobacco was working hard to attract young people. In 2022, about one in five adults around the world were smokers or consumed other tobacco products, compared to one in every three in 2000, the UN health agency said.

A fresh WHO report looking at trends in the prevalence of tobacco use between 2000 and 2030 showed that 150 countries were successful­ly reducing tobacco use through regulation, high taxes and other measures. But it cautioned that the tobacco industry was stepping up its efforts to circumvent and undermine that progress, including through systematic attempts to hook children with their highly addictive products.

They are using “what I would personally call criminal efforts,” Ruediger Krech, director of the WHO’s health promotion department, told reporters in Geneva. “They are killing, and they continue to do everything possible to undermine the countries’ very good efforts.” Currently, tobacco use is still estimated to kill more than eight million people each year, including an estimated 1.3 million non-smokers who are exposed to second-hand smoke, WHO statistics show. And the WHO warned that while smoking rates are declining, it will take decades for the number of tobacco-related deaths to follow suit.

Though the number of smokers has steadily shrunk, the WHO said the world was set to miss its goal of a 30-percent drop in tobacco use between 2010 and 2025. Fifty-six countries around the world are expected to hit that target, including Brazil, which has already slashed tobacco use by 35 percent since 2010.

Six countries have meanwhile seen tobacco use rise since 2010 — the Republic of Congo, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Moldova and Oman. Overall, the world is on track to shrink tobacco use by a quarter over the 15-year period to 2025, the report said.

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