Call for political action to cut smoking deaths
LONDON: Fifty years after its groundbreaking report in which doctors first tried to talk directly to the public about the catastrophic dangers of smoking, the UK's Royal College of Physicians (RCP) warns on Tuesday that the death toll from cigarettes will not fall unless the government takes decisive action.
On the anniversary of its celebrated 1962 report on smoking and health which started to turn the tide, the RCP says more than six million people have lost their lives to tobacco and more than a fifth of the population still use cigarettes.
Although the price of a packet of cigarettes has steadily increased, it is now 50 per cent more affordable than in 1965, said Professor John Britton, chair of its tobacco advisory group. Prices are further cut through discounting and illicit supply.
“The real failure is political leadership,” he said. “Some of our governments in the past have been extremely close to the tobacco industry. Margaret Thatcher left office and took up a three-year role with Philip Morris and Kenneth Clarke, who had been a health secretary, became a director of British American Tobacco.”
Tony Blair's government later delayed enforcing a ban on tobacco sponsorship in Formula One after a GBP1m donation to the Labour party by Bernie Ecclestone.
Today Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, will face calls for price rises, plain packaging, prime-time TV campaigns and curbs on smoking in films at a one-day conference at the college, called to examine progress over the 50 years. The government is to announce today a campaign highlighting the damaging effects of second-hand smoke.
The college says that the 20 per cent of people now smoking stand to lose 100m years of life between them. Even though smoking rates have fallen substantially since it was banned in bars and restaurants, around 10 million people in the UK still have the habit. Half of those will die because of it.
Dr Mike Knapton, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, agrees with the college that plain packaging should be introduced - a measure the industry is fighting hard against.
“We need to do more to discourage children and young people starting smoking,” he said. “The evidence shows young people are influenced, and sometimes misled, by glitzy cigarette packaging, so stripping packs of their attractive colours and logos by introducing plain, standardised packaging will help lessen the lure of smoking to a new generation.”
Although the ban on smoking in enclosed public places, which took effect in 2007, has changed perceptions, Knapton said tobacco “remains the UK's biggest cause of avoidable early death, so it's right that the focus is now shifting to the effect of smoking in the home and confined spaces such as cars, especially where children are present”.
Britton also wants action against smoking in films and on TV. “There is a terrific amount of smoking imagery in films passed suitable for 12-year-olds,” he said. “In [the BBC comedy] Gavin & Stacey's Christmas special they were sharing a cigarette from a branded pack of Marlboro.”
The 1962 report was a milestone in the relationship between doctor and patient, marking the moment when physicians began to promote public health. Richard Doll and Austin Bradford Hill provided the definitive study in the 1950s that demonstrated the lethal nature of tobacco by following smoking and non-smoking doctors. But the study had an ambivalent and even hostile response in some quarters of the government, media and society.
By arrangement with the Guardian