Home > Ireland leads the way in Europe in tackling the tobacco epidemic.

[EPHA] Ireland leads the way in Europe in tackling the tobacco epidemic. (23 Jan 2014)

External website: http://www.epha.org/a/5924


EPHA press release:

The European Public Health Alliance (EPHA) has sent (1) an open letter to the Oireachtas’ Chair of the Committee on Health and Children, supporting Ireland’s plain packaging plans.
 
The public health community should congratulate Ireland for taking this bold step in tackling the tobacco epidemic (2). We must work to protect future generations from the harmful effects of tobacco products. Irish efforts should serve as an encouraging example for the rest of Europe.
 
Tobacco packaging is carefully designed by the Tobacco Industry to target consumers - for example, the use of slim cigarettes to target women and coloured packaging to appeal to children. Evidence shows that warning messages and pictorial warnings encourage smokers to quit and non-smokers to never start smoking (3).
 
“Europe’s youth has the highest smoking rates in the world, with higher rates among lower socio-economic groups and rising rates in the young female population (4)” warned Peggy Maguire, President of EPHA and Director General of the European Institute of Women’s Health.
 
“We know from the UK’s experience that the tobacco industry will put up a fierce fight to block, amend or delay the introduction of standardised packaging. So, we welcome the Irish government’s commitment to protecting children from tobacco marketing. Stripping cigarette packaging of their bright colours and marketing gimmicks draws attention to the health warnings, and reveals cigarettes as the deadly products they are,” added Alison Cox of Cancer Research UK.
 
The new EU Tobacco Product Directive (TPD), endorsed by the Council of the EU and the European Parliament, will mandate that picture and text health warnings cover 65% of tobacco packages; EU Member States can, however, adopt more stringent measures to regulate tobacco products, such as plain packaging.
 
Today’s plain packaging consultation launch in Ireland should encourage other EU Member States to step up public health measures to make smoking, the cause of hundreds of thousands of deaths a year in Europe, less attractive to people.

Notes to editors

(2) Around 700,000 people die every year in Europe from tobacco-related diseases. In addition, close to 13 million people suffer from smoking-related diseases in the EU, with devastating effects not only on societies and healthcare systems, but also economically as the estimated annual cost of tobacco to the European economy is more than half a trillion euros, or about 4.6% of EU GDP.
(4) European Institute of Women’s Health briefing. 2013. “Women and smoking in the EU.”
Item Type
News
Publication Type
Irish-related, International
Drug Type
Tobacco / Nicotine
Intervention Type
Policy
Source
Date
23 January 2014
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