Mum buys son cigarettes to get him off the vapes
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Tobacco Control has morphed into a crusade intent on demonizing both tobacco users and the industry supplying them. This blog examines and comments on scientific issues surrounding tobacco policies - and fallacies.
Without encouragement to use harm-reducing nicotine products, a large proportion of remaining smokers will continue to smoke, and will thus have a 50 per cent chance of dying from a tobacco-related disease. With the status quo in tobacco/nicotine policy that is given legitimacy by the authorities – that is a policy without an active harm-reduction strategy – use of tobacco will maintain and strengthen future social inequalities in health status.
In Scandinavia up until now there has been little willingness to discuss harm reduction in the area of tobacco. The debate has been hampered by dogmatic statements of principle (particularly about snus) that suppress exchange of opinions and reflections about the ethical implications of harm reduction. Interest for – albeit limited – empirical research that can illuminate the theme has been moderate, taking into consideration the potential that harm reduction has for improving public health. Maybe this report can stimulate less biased debate?
In Scandinavia, the tobacco problem is not substantially less serious now than it was in the 1960s. At that time, doctors did not know the extent of the hazards of smoking, or that cigarettes would be the cause of so many deaths over the next 40 years. We now have knowledge about the extent of the hazards, nearly all conceivable preventive measures have been used, and we can predict future changes in smoking behaviour. In contrast to the doctors in the 1960s, we are now on the brink of a human catastrophe that we have been warned will occur if the reduction in smoking does not speed up. To ignore harm reduction as a future strategy in the area of tobacco can be erroneous in this situation. An uncompromising attitude to a tobacco-free society can deny many nicotine-dependent smokers the possibility to survive, which they could have had if the authorities had assumed a more pragmatic attitude to harm reduction.
About half a year before this report was published in English, an almost identical version was published in Norwegian. In Norway, the report received a lot of attention and stimulated a continuation of the debate on harm reduction, both in the media and in professional circles. The Norwegian Directorate of Health and representatives of the Norwegian Medical Association have some new points of view that can be interpreted as more positive to harm reduction ideology. For example, a director of division in the Norwegian Directorate of Health said to the newspaper Bergens Tidende under the headline "The Norwegian Directorate of Health is willing to consider snus":
"The Norwegian Directorate of Health says yes to general practitioners, dentists and other health care personnel being able to recommend health-damaging snus to inveterate smokers. Snus is clearly less damaging to health than smoking. If patients have tried other methods without success, we mean that health care personnel can recommend that they use snus instead," says Knut-Inge Klepp, director of division in the Norwegian Directorate of Health. He stresses that before such a recommendation can be made, other nicotine replacement products, and, if appropriate, medicinal nicotine products, must have been tried. Klepp also stresses that such a recommendation must be made directly by health care personnel to the person who needs advice. He is strongly against a general recommendation.
On the web site of the Norwegian Directorate of Health, a new attitude to use of snus as a harm-reducing product is confirmed:
"We know that a large proportion of people who smoke have contact with a dentist or a general practitioner," says Klepp. "It is important that health care personnel take up the topic of smoking, recommend quitting, and help people who wish to quit. In the first instance they should try established methods such as nicotine chewing gum, nicotine patches or medicinal nicotine products available on prescription. If patients have tried these methods without being successful, the Norwegian Directorate of Health means that health care personnel in individual cases can consider that the patient should try snus instead."
Country | Deaths From Smoking, 2002 | At Swedish Rate | % Change At Swedish Rate |
Austria | 7,000 | 3,900 | -44 |
Bulgaria | 7,100 | 3,800 | -46 |
Czech Republic | 12,500 | 4,500 | -64 |
Denmark | 5,700 | 2,800 | -52 |
Estonia | 1,600 | 600 | -66 |
Finland | 4,100 | 2,600 | -36 |
France | 60,000 | 28,300 | -53 |
Germany | 83,700 | 43,700 | -48 |
Greece | 13,900 | 6,200 | -56 |
Hungary | 16,300 | 4,400 | -73 |
Ireland | 2,700 | 1,600 | -43 |
Italy | 75,300 | 34,200 | -55 |
Latvia | 2,600 | 900 | -64 |
Lithuania | 3,500 | 1,300 | -63 |
Luxembourg | 400 | 200 | -53 |
Malta | 400 | 200 | -51 |
Netherlands | 18,700 | 7,700 | -59 |
Poland | 48,500 | 14,400 | -70 |
Portugal | 7,000 | 5,100 | -26 |
Romania | 20,100 | 9,000 | -56 |
Slovakia | 4,900 | 1,900 | -61 |
Slovenia | 2,100 | 900 | -58 |
Spain | 46,100 | 21,100 | -54 |
Sweden | 5,200 | 5,200 | --- |
United Kingdom | 59,500 | 32,000 | -46 |
All EU Countries | 509,000 | 236,500 | -54 |