Cancer survivors demand picture-based warnings on cigarette labels

Source: www.interaksyon.com Author: staff MANILA, Philippines -- More than 150 anti-smoking activists, including throat cancer survivors, marched to the Commission on Human Rights in Quezon City Thursday to urge government to fast-track the passage of legislation requiring tobacco firms to put graphic health warnings on cigarette packs. The “Right to Health Walk” is the third march organized by New Vois Association of the Philippines to push public health issues to the fore. “Ten percent of the world’s 1.3 billion smokers can be found in Southeast Asia where the Philippines belong. We are the second largest smoking population in this region with 17.3 million adults smoking. More than 87,000 Filipinos die every year because of smoking -- that’s more than the number of those who succumb to heart attack and stroke. This is clear and present danger that must be addressed at the soonest,” Emer Rojas, NVAP president, said. Rojas said graphic health warnings provide a clearer message about the harm smoking causes, especially to women, children, and the poor who are lured to the habit by the attractive designs of cigarette packs. The newly released Tobacco Atlas of the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance showed the Philippines among the three countries with the most number of smoking women in the region. It is estimated that nine percent of Filipino women smoke. This is statistically more than Indonesia, which has the most number of smokers in the region. Only 4.5 percent of Indonesian women smoke. The Tobacco Atlas also estimates that [...]

Gruesome warnings doing their job

Source: www.stuff.co.nz Author: staff Even in today's world with its plethora of information-gathering techniques there is probably no way to say for certain how much influence the use of revolting pictures on cigarette packets is having on the smoking rate, The Nelson Mail said in an editorial on Thursday. One thing is fairly certain, though - the images of gangrenous toes, diseased lungs and other rotting body parts are unlikely to bring about an increase. They have surely made some contribution to the latest statistics, which show a marked drop in the smoking rate, down from 25 percent of New Zealanders two years ago to around 20 percent, or 170,000 fewer smokers. The Health Ministry is right to attribute some of that improvement to the pictures, which at a stroke removed any semblance of sophistication from tobacco packaging, an area manufacturers used to put some effort into. It is doubtful that they can identify much revenue potential in that any more. The point has been further emphasised by a series of discomforting television commercials bravely fronted by mouth cancer sufferer Adrian Pilkington. He too shows the true nature of tobacco addiction in a way that forces smokers to confront the dangers of their habit. These two measures, along with the requirement for the Quitline number to be on every cigarette packet, are undoubtedly having an effect, hard as it is to define. There have after all been a number of restrictions introduced that have made it more difficult to pursue [...]

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