Tobacco use remains a pressing public health issue worldwide, especially with shisha and other products gaining popularity among young people. Kazakhstan took a firm step by banning the sale, import, and production of e-cigarettes and all tobacco products, while maintaining restrictions on shisha smoking in public places. In an exclusive interview with Kazinform News Agency, WHO Representative Dr. Skender Syla spoke about the country’s progress in tobacco control and warned of the serious health risks posed by waterpipe smoking.
Islamabad : The Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index has called upon governments to ensure transparency when interacting with the tobacco industry as greater transparency will reduce instances of interference to manipulate tobacco control policies and their implementation processes. The Index has stressed that the tobacco industry should also be made to disclose its expenditures on marketing, lobbying, and philanthropic activities.
ISLAMABAD: The Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index has called upon governments to ensure transparency while interacting with tobacco industry as it will reduce instances of interference to manipulate tobacco control policies and their implementation processes.
Many governments found themselves between a rock and a hard place during the COVID-19 pandemic when offered donations of goods and funds by the tobacco industry. However, opening the door to the tobacco industry’s charity also paves the way to a relationship that the industry will exploit to further its business. A collaborative relationship with the industry serves to undermine tobacco control.
MONTEVIDEO (Uypress) - The Latin American Tobacco Industry Interference Index was launched virtually. This contains the results of an evaluation in which 9 countries in the region were analyzed, in alphabetical order: Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay.
The tobacco industry is exploiting the Covid-19 pandemic to hook new users and push new products, according to the Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index (GTIII) 2020.
Ghana has been ranked 58th in a Global Tobacco industry interference assessment and it’s related risk.
The country position though encouraging, lead tobacco risks advocates in the industry believed there is still much to be improved.
• The listing of tobacco as an essential product in April during the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic has tainted the country’s image on the global stage.
• The Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index 2020 is a review of how governments respond to influences and protecting their public health policies from commercial interests.
ISLAMABAD: The Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index has called upon governments to ensure transparency while interacting with tobacco industry as it will reduce instances of interference to manipulate tobacco control policies and their implementation processes.
The index stressed that the tobacco industry should also be made to disclose its expenditures on marketing, lobbying and philanthropic activities.
PARIS: The global tobacco industry has aggressively lobbied governments during the Covid-19 pandemic to expand markets and blunt measures designed to curb their business, a report from watchdog groups aligned with the World Health Organization claimed on Tuesday.
A ranking of 57 countries based on their willingness to keep Big Tobacco at bay puts Japan and Indonesia at the bottom of the list, with Romania, China and Lebanon among the 10 worst offenders. The United States is the lowest-ranked Western nation, with Malaysia, Spain, Germany and India also seen as too accommodating, said the report by non-profit groups based in France, England and Thailand.
The Nigeria Tobacco Control Alliance (NTCA) and the Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) have launched the 2020 tobacco industry interference index report for Nigeria.
The Nigeria Tobacco Control Alliance (NTCA) and the Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) have launched the 2020 tobacco industry interference index report for Nigeria. The report of the survey forms part of the Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index – a global survey of how public health policies are protected from the industry’s subversive efforts, and how governments have pushed back against this influence.
As governments around the world are focused on fighting COVID-19 tobacco companies are encouraging policy makers to let down their guard against the main driver of another deadly epidemic: tobacco use.
The global tobacco industry has aggressively lobbied governments during the COVID-19 pandemic to expand markets and blunt measures designed to curb their business, a report from watchdog groups aligned with the World Health Organization claimed on Tuesday.
They recommend that the country establish a Code of Conduct for the interaction of government officials with members of the industry in compliance with the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)
In international forums, there are powerful voices against the power of epidemiologists. And it is that with regard to the global health contingency, caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, many populist politicians have left in the hands of these medical specialists the decision-making that has drastically modified the progress of the economy and the mobility of populations whole.
The Vision for Alternative Development (VALD) is much concerned about the continuous existence of tobacco industry interference in public health policies in Ghana. It is no doubt that the industry uses diverse tactics to influence policies in their favor putting the lives of people in danger. Unfortunately, most countries including Ghana have not fully dealt with and handled these interferences swiftly to protect the lives of the citizenry despite being a signatory on the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) in 2004.
The WHO tobacco control agreement came into force 15 years ago. A report from various organizations, which tagesschau.de had received in advance, gave Germany poor marks on the implementation.
The Vision for Alternative Development (VALD) is much concerned about the continuous existence of tobacco industry interference in public health policies in Ghana. It is no doubt that the industry uses diverse tactics to influence policies in their favour putting the lives people in danger.