Tobacco May Kill 1 Billion in This Century, WHO Says – Update 2
2/7/2008 web-based article Henry Goldman and Bill Varner Bloomberg (www.bloomberg.com) Tobacco use will kill 1 billion people in this century, a 10-fold increase over the past 100 years, unless governments in poor nations raise taxes on consumption and mandate health warnings, the World Health Organization said. No country fully implements these most important tobacco- control measures, according to a 330-page report released today by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the Geneva-based UN agency. Bloomberg, who helped fund the study, joined WHO Director-General Margaret Chan at a news conference in New York to discuss the findings. "This is a unique point in public health history as the forces of political will, policies and funding are aligned to create the momentum needed to dramatically reduce tobacco use and save millions of lives by the middle of this century," Chan said in a foreword to the report. The WHO said the tobacco "epidemic" causes the deaths of 5.4 million people a year due to lung cancer, heart disease and other illnesses. That figure might rise to 8 million per year by 2030, including 80 percent in "countries whose rapidly growing economies offer their citizens the hope of a better life," the report said. American States The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, said states are falling short on U.S. recommendations to boost insurance coverage of proven anti-smoking treatments that fight nicotine addiction. The Atlanta-based U.S. government agency said eight states' Medicaid programs, which serve [...]