Whanganui Midweek

As smoke clears, I’d rather be here

The discussion all but ignores the fact that the vast majority of smokers, when asked, want to give up the habit and have tried numerous times to do so. So hooked are they on the nicotine, that it is an uphill battle for most.

- Deb Hart Deb Hart is the Director of ASH NZ, an independen­t not for profit that acts for a smoke-free future.

Like so many Kiwis, it’s become a favourite pastime of mine to moan about Covid restrictio­ns and what we could’ve done better.

It’s a long list and it’s always a conversati­on starter.

Of late, as the conversati­on is ripping into life, and people are getting into full gear on MIQ (my personal hate), border controls, travel restrictio­ns, saliva testing and the late vaccinatio­n rollout, I like to ask where in the world you would rather have been?

It’s a question that I would put to Fred Frederikse who lately reminisced so wistfully, on these pages, about preferring Indonesia, due entirely to the cheap ciggies on offer there.

Oh, Indonesia, where a whopping 34 per cent of the population, some 57 million people, smoke.

Half of all those lucky Indonesian­s who smoke, die of smoking-related causes, that’s an estimated 300,000 people dying annually from the habit.

It’s the place you can smoke in offices, bars, restaurant­s and even if you don’t smoke, you can be exposed to secondhand smoking, a phenomenon that has been greatly diminished here because of progressiv­e tobacco control measures that have crossparty support.

The discussion all but ignores the fact that the vast majority of smokers, when asked, want to give up the habit and have tried numerous times to do so. So hooked are they on the nicotine, that it is an uphill battle for most.

But back to Indonesia. Much better to be there than in little old New Zealand where a raft of measures, including smokefree environmen­ts, taxation, plain packaging and most notably, the availabili­ty of e-cigarettes, has seen our smoking rates plummet. Young people are ditching cigarettes big time.

In the last year alone nearly 100,000 fewer people were smoking than the year before. It’s a decline that is unpreceden­ted and will save thousands of lives.

And now that dastardly government, not content with the decline, has announced it intends that we all get to the Smokefree 2025 goal together, where less than 5 per cent of us will smoke.

All of us, the rich who have already given up smoking and the poor, many of whom have not; Pa¯ keha¯ , who don’t smoke so much, together with Ma¯ ori and Pasifika who all too often still do.

It has announced that it will ramp up support for community initiative­s, much like those that have been so successful in getting to Ma¯ ori and Pacifica in the vaccine rollout. It will optimise the much less harmful vaping for adults as a quit smoking measure whilst increasing measures to prevent kids from taking up the habit.

All of this will drive down the demand for cigarettes, which is already happening. It’s quite hard to feed a black market when no one wants your wretched product. And you can’t advertise cigarettes because of course we got rid of tobacco advertisin­g years ago. Unlike Indonesia which provides tax exemptions that provide incentives to tobacco manufactur­ers to advertise.

With all of that in hand, the Government intends a raft of other measures that have hit the headlines — a smoke-free generation, lessening the addictive nature of cigarettes and reducing the number of outlets that can sell the product.

It’s all the intended consequenc­es of the Smokefree 2025 project, a project that continues to have cross-party support.

New Zealand has been uniquely successful in driving down the death, disease and financial burden to individual­s, families and our health system. And we are on track to be even more successful. So I ask you, where in the world would you prefer to be?

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Indonesia might be smokin’ but it’s not preferable.
Photo / Getty Images Indonesia might be smokin’ but it’s not preferable.

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