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Tobacco Epidemic and Best Practices Control Policies-India

Tobacco Epidemic and Best Practices Control Policies-India. Dr . Rana J Singh MD DPHA IFPM Dy.Regional Director(Tobacco and NCD Control ) The Union South-East Asia(The Union).

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Tobacco Epidemic and Best Practices Control Policies-India

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  1. Tobacco Epidemic and Best Practices Control Policies-India Dr. Rana J Singh MD DPHA IFPM Dy.Regional Director(Tobacco and NCD Control) The Union South-East Asia(The Union) 3rd Conference of The Union South-East Asia Region, May 26-28, 2016, Kathmandu, Nepal

  2. Tobacco Wild tobacco (Nicotiana rustica) Cultivated tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Any of numerous species of Nicotiana or the cured leaves of several of the species that are used after processing in various ways for smoking, snuffing, chewing, and extracting nicotine Text source: Encyclopedia Britannica. (1999); Image source: Wikimedia Commons. (2007). Permission granted for educational use. 2

  3. Burden of Tobacco-Global Tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in the world – WHO report 2003. Tobacco kills:5.4 million people each year ONE BILLION people will die from tobacco use this century.

  4. Global Scenario • Tobacco is responsible for 1 in 10 deaths in adults • About 1 billion men and 250 million women are smoker • If the current trend continues , tobacco use would cause 10 million deaths each year by 2020 • Half ( 650 million) of the people who smoke today will eventually be killed

  5. Global Burden • In poor and developing countries , tobacco use is emerging as an epidemic . • High public health costs for treating tobacco related diseases. • Tobacco kills people at the height of their productivity • In some low income countries , poor spend almost 10% of their income on tobacco

  6. Tobacco Is a Risk Factor for 6 of the World’s 8 Leading Causes of Death Hatched areas indicate proportions of deaths related to tobacco use.

  7. Nearly Two-Thirds of World’s Smokers Live in Just 10 Countries More than 40% live in just 2 countries Source: MPOWER package. 2008 7

  8. Tobacco Burden in IndiaGlobal Adult Tobacco Survey- India(2009-10)

  9. Tobacco use in India 84% tobacco users use it every day Smokers 14% (112 million) Smokeless tobacco users 26% (206 million)

  10. Percentage of current tobacco users

  11. Overview of Tobacco Use • Prevalence of tobacco use is 35% • Among tobacco users 84% are daily users • Among smokers and smokeless tobacco users many use multiple tobacco products • One-fourth of cigarettes smokers and half of the bidi smokers smoke more than 10 cigarettes/bidis per day • Mean age at initiation of tobacco use is 17.8 years • Among tobacco users 60% use tobacco within half an hour of waking up

  12. Tobacco Use in India – in real terms

  13. Exposure to SHS

  14. Exposure to SHS

  15. GYTS India 2009 • 13-15 years school students • 14.6% use tobacco • 4.4% smoke • 21.9% live in the homes where others smoke in their presence

  16. Burden of tobacco in India • Kills 10 lakh persons annually in India (more than TB, HIV/AIDS, malaria combined). • 2500 deaths daily. • 50% of cancers in men and 25% in women. • Highest incidence of oral cancer in the world. • Majority of cardio-vascular and lung disorders

  17. Burden of tobacco use • Almost 40% of TB deaths are associated with smoking. • Incidence of impotence is 85% higher among smokers. • 5500 youth initiate tobacco use every day. • Environmental burden

  18. India’s policy on Tobacco control

  19. Two major regulations for tobacco control in India • Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act 2003(COTPA 2003) • Food Safety and Standards Act 2006(FSSA 2006)

  20. Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act(COTPA-2003) Section 4 – Prohibition of smoking in public places Section 5 - Ban on advertisements of tobacco products Section 6 (a) - Prohibition of sale of tobacco products to and by minors Section 6 (b) - Prohibition on sale of tobacco products within the radius of 100 yards of any educational institutions Section 7 - Specified health warning labels on all tobacco products

  21. Section 4 /Prohibition of Smoking in Public places rules,2008 The Owner, proprietor, manager, supervisor or in charge of the affairs of a public place is responsible to make the public place as …..shall ensure No person smokes in his jurisdiction Display of the specified board at each entrance, and conspicuous place inside Such board at each floor and entrance to lift No smoking aids are provided in public place Shall notify and display the name of person to whom complaint be made Designated smoking area/Smoking rooms : exemptions

  22. Section-5 ● No person engaged in the production, supply or distribution of tobacco products shall advertise ● No person having control over a medium shall cause to be advertised through that medium ● No person shall take part in any advertisement which directly or indirectly suggests or promotes to use or consumption of tobacco products ● No trade mark or brand name of cigarettes or any tobacco product to be promoted in exchange for sponsorship, gift, prize or scholarship ● No person, under contract or otherwise, promote or agree to promote any tobacco product or its usage ● Advertisements allowed at point of sale and in or on package

  23. Section 6 (a): Provisions of the law Prohibits sale of tobacco products to and by persons below the age of 18 years. • The Owner / manager / in-charge where tobacco products are sold shall ensure that: • A board from the two option is at the entrance of the place where tobacco products are sold in a manner as given below : • Minimum size of the board should be 60cm x 30cm with white background. • The board should contain the warning “sale of tobacco products to a person below the age of 18 years is a punishable offence”, in Indian language(s) as applicable and a pictorial depiction of ill effects of tobacco use on health. • The board shall not have any advertisement / promotional messages / pictures / images of cigarette and any other tobacco products. • No tobacco product is handled or sold by minors. • No tobacco product is sold through a vending machine. • No tobacco products are displayed in a manner that enables its easy access to minors. • The seller of tobacco product shall confirm that the buyer of tobacco product is not a minor. In case of doubt the seller may request the buyer to provide appropriate age proof/identity proof. Cigarette and other tobacco products Amendment Rules, 2011

  24. Signages under section 6 (a) Specifications as given in the Compact Disk :Pictorial image shall occupy 50% of the board (60cm x30cm) The design and specification of board can be downloaded from http://mohfw.nic.in/showfile.php?lid=937

  25. Section 6 (b): Provisions of the law • All educational institutions should have a board on their boundary wall or at the entrance. The board should state prominently that “sale of cigarette or any other tobacco products in an area within the radius of 100 yards of the educational institution is strictly prohibited; the offence is punishable with a fine upto Rs. 200” • Measurement of the distance: distance of 100 yards shall be measured radially from the outer limit of boundary wall, fence or as the case may be, of the educational institution, for the location of a tobacco vendor or point of sale

  26. Signage section 6(b)

  27. Depiction of Specified Health Warnings • Section 7: There shall be no production, sale and import of cigarettes or any other tobacco product unless every package of cigarettes or any other tobacco product bears on it label, specified warning. • Section 8: Manner in which specified warning shall be made • The specified warning on a package of cigarettes or any other tobacco products shall be- • legible and prominent ; • conspicuous as to size and colour • Section 9: Language in which the specified warning shall be expressed

  28. New pictorial warnings w.e.f April 2016 For chewing or smokeless forms of tobacco packages

  29. New pictorial warnings • For smoking forms of tobacco packs

  30. National Tobacco Control Programme(NTCP)

  31. Justification for NTCP-India • Complexity of Tobacco use in India • Complexity of Stakeholders and multi-sector involvement • TC requires multi-sectoral approach involving various stakeholders • Need to identify various strategies for different sectors / stakeholders for effective TC • NTCP acting as Central Programme will: - help sensitize all sectors and stakeholders - increase awareness generation among youth and adults - help raising policy and legislation issues - help implementation of related public health and legislative issues of tobacco control at state • Tobacco is a public health problem in India and like other need a national level programme to provide guidance to the states • FCTC obligations

  32. Goals of NTCP-India • Prevent initiation among youth and adults • Promote quitting among adults and youth • Eliminate exposure to tobacco smoke(SHS) • Reduce demand by IEC campaigns, ban on TAPS, and pack warnings • Reduce Supply by restricting access to minors And thereby : Reduce tobacco related morbidity and mortality

  33. National Tobacco Control Program Central Government Level • Set up the National Tobacco Regulatory Authority for effective enforcement and monitoring State and District Government Level • Launch pilot of the State and District Tobacco Control Program • Establish State and District Tobacco Control Cells (STCC and DTCC). Currently in 21 states, 42 districts • Establish state and district level steering committees to monitor legislation imlementation • Establish tobacco cessation centres • Build capacity through training, sensitization and workshops All levels • Increase public awareness

  34. National Tobacco Control Program MoH&FW State Tobacco Control Cell District Tobacco Control Units Monitoring tobacco control laws & reporting IEC Tobacco Cessation Training School based activities

  35. Central level Activities(NTCC) • Set up a National Tobacco Regulatory Authority(NTRA) • Establishing labs for testing tar/nicotine content of tobacco products • Capacity building: Development of training material • Public education: National level Mass Media Campaign • Surveillance: Support to conduct GATS/GYTS • Alternate crops and livelihood • To take necessary action, in co-ordination with other Ministries and stakeholders, to fulfil the obligation(s) under the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control

  36. State level Activities during 12thFYP (proposed) • State Tobacco Control Cells(STCC) to be established to undertake: • IEC and Advocacy efforts • Training of key stakeholders including enforcement officers, schools teachers etc. • Meetings of the State Level Co-ordination Committee(SLCC) and its follow up • Activities relating to enforcement of COTPA in the state • Overall monitoring and supervision for the implementation of NTCP and Tobacco Control Act (COTPA, 2003) in the districts. • Flexipoolhas been provided to states to cater to state specific needs and demands

  37. Components of District Tobacco Control Programme (Pilot Phase) • Training : Training of School teachers, health workers, health professionals, law enforcers, NGO’s, women SHG’s on tobacco control • IEC : IEC using Cable TV, Street Shows, Exhibitions, Melas, etc in the regional language at grassroot level; Anti tobacco awareness programs by the trained Women SHG/ NGO’s. • School Programs : School Programme in Govt. Schools (50 Schools per district). • Monitoring Enforcement of Tobacco Control Laws • Tobacco Cessation Centres: Setting up of TCC’s in Districts.

  38. Training : Training of health workers, health professionals, law enforcers, NGO’s, women SHG’s on tobacco control measures District Tobacco Control Program

  39. IEC : Local/Folk media, BCC strategies, in collaboration with NGOs/CBOs/SHGs/PRIs. IEC material being updated/prepared. District Tobacco Control Program

  40. School Level Activities : involving awareness/ education campaigns, training of school teachers, Tobacco Free Schools initiatives. District Tobacco Control Program

  41. Monitoring - Formation of District level committees/District Action Plans for Enforcement of Tobacco Control Laws, evolving district specific monitoring and implementation mechanisms. District Tobacco Control Program

  42. Tobacco Cessation Clinic – To provide help to quit tobacco use at the community level, cessation facilities are being provided and capacity building for cessation at the district and sub district level. District Tobacco Control Program

  43. Let us all work together tofulfill the dream of a healthy,Tobacco Free India

  44. Thank you

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