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#445 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Wed Nov 11, 2009 8:23 am
Subject: New images to replace pictorial warnings on tobacco packs
rhlkaka
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New images to replace pictorial warnings on tobacco packs
The Hindu, Chennai, Tamil Nadu

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
Responding to complaints that pictorial warnings on tobacco packs are ineffective, the Union Ministry of Health has decided to change the images. A senior official in the Ministry said the process had been kick-started.

The changes are being considered specifically because of insistent pressure from civil society organisations that the current images of a scorpion, diseased lungs and X-ray of the lungs are mild and have not served their purpose of deterrence. The official said the mild pictures were chosen to usher in the concept of pictorial warnings. The government was aware of the pressing demand to change them.

It would be ready with the images at least three months ahead of June, in order to prepare the industry, according to official sources. The government is mandated to change the images every year, as per the regulations of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The current law to display images to occupy 40 per cent of the space on packs came into effect on May 31, 2009.
Pictures suggested to the Ministry include powerful ones used in other countries, including South America, and will be examined. The images will be field-tested before the Ministry approves a fresh set of pictorial warnings.

Three studies conducted by the Healis-Sekhsaria Institute for Public Health in Mumbai recently showed there were serious inadequacies in the implementation of the pictorial warning criteria and that the current warnings were not properly understood by people. P.C. Gupta, director of the institute, said: "The issue of pictorial warnings on tobacco products has been a long-running battle… The dilution of the pictorial warnings themselves…indicates there has been a clear lack of commitment from the government in implementing warnings."

"Changing the images used on tobacco packs is essential," says E. Vidhubala of the Tobacco Cessation Centre, Cancer Institute, here. The current images are unable to invoke any direct co-relation to the harmful effects of tobacco use. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
issue-772


#446 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Thu Nov 12, 2009 7:56 am
Subject: Ban on smoking: City to breathe easier
rhlkaka
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Ban on smoking: City to breathe easier
The Times of India, Bhubaneswar, Orissa

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
BHUBANESWAR: If all goes well, Bhubaneswar will become "smoke-free" within the next six months. The state government on Tuesday announced to crack down on smokers in public places in the city. To ensure that the general public is not forced to become passive smokers, anyone found violating the rule will be fined up to Rs 200.

"Imposing fine on smokers in public places would definitely be a big step towards making the city smoke-free," Health minister Prasanna Acharya said. "It was due to several arrangements needed to implement the rule that led to the delay in imposing it," he added. He further said that the rule should not be confined only to offices, hotels, market places and malls, but awareness must also be created among a larger section of the people who live in the city's slums.

Designated officials, including the police, drug control inspectors and food inspectors will be the assigning officials under the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Product Act 2003. The state government may also consider notifying additional authorized officers to implement the provisions of the rules. Health secretary Anu Garg said, "We are going to take several measures like setting up flying squads for monitoring, enforcement and compliance, to launch toll-free help line and online reporting system and establish a mechanism for issuing challans or compounding of offence to ensure that the rule is being implemented properly. An assessment will be done by the monitoring committee to observe the level of compliance of the law before the official declaration of smoke free Bhubaneswar in the next six months."

"Besides protecting children, women and non-smokers from the harmful consequences of smoking, such an initiative will improve the global image of Bhubaneswar and will be helpful in promoting business and tourism," said Itishree Kanungo, an activist of Aparajita-VHAI, an organization working for anti-tobacco movement. "I think this is a very good step. It will solve the problem of passive smoking forced on women, children and non-smokers. The administration should be complimented if it works," Rita Pani, a corporate executive, said.

However, not everyone is happy about it. "This is a democratic country. Has the administration taken the views of the smokers to work out a solution? Such laws are not enforced even in cities in western countries," Arun Mohanty, a smoker, said. According to sources, every year nine lakh tobacco deaths occur in India. India is the second largest producer of tobacco with 240 million tobacco users, nearly one third of world's total 800 million tobacco users. Orissa is the second highest among female chewing with 34.9 per cent after Mizoram's 60.7 per cent. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Thursday, 12 November 2009
Issue-774


#447 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Mon Nov 16, 2009 10:21 am
Subject: Awareness needed on bad effects of tobacco: Collector
rhlkaka
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Awareness needed on bad effects of tobacco: Collector
The Hindu, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

[To read this news in Hindu language, click here]

EXCERPT:
Concerted efforts by the Government to stop promotional advertisements of tobacco products and sensitisation drives have led to a decline in the number of new tobacco users. While this is an encouraging sign, more awareness on the ill-effects needs to be generated to wean the existing users from smoking or chewing tobacco, District Collector P. Umanath said here on Wednesday.
Opening a Tobacco Cessation Centre at G. Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Dr. Umanath said the habit of smoking had thrived because a social stigma had not been attached to it, unlike in the case of alcohol consumption. There was not much pressure on a smoker from the people around to quit the habit. Apart from addiction, this was the other factor that contributed to people continuing to use tobacco products.

The Collector termed the opening of the centre as a rare initiative that was the need of the hour. People needed help to stop using tobacco. So such guidance centres became very relevant to the drive against tobacco use, he pointed out. "Give wide publicity on the centre as people should know of such a facility that can save them from the dangers posed by tobacco use," he told the hospital. Dean of the hospital Ramkumar Raghupathy said Tobacco Cessation Centres were few in number across the country and the centre opened here on Wednesday was only the 19th in the country.

Such centres were important in disseminating information to the people on the cancer in the mouth, aesophagus, lungs and the heart diseases that tobacco could cause. "Many legal battles have brought out the ill-effects of tobacco. World Health Organisation reports say 65 per cent of the men smoke and 20 per cent chew tobacco. The Tobacco Cessation Centre has been opened with the view that valuable lives should not go up in smoke," he said.

The centre was a joint initiative of the hospital, the Valavadi Narayanaswamy Cancer Centre (VNCC) attached to it and the Coimbatore Cancer Foundation and the Confederation of Indian Industry. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Monday, 16 November 2009
issue- 776


#448 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Wed Nov 18, 2009 9:41 am
Subject: Over 1.7 million children work in beedi-rolling industry: Study
rhlkaka
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Over 1.7 million children work in beedi-rolling industry: Study
IANS News, India

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
Over 1.7 million children work as labourers in India's beedi-rolling industry, according to a study by public health organisations and NGOs released on Children's Day Saturday. Authors of the study urged the government to take urgent measures to address the issue. A beedi is a hand-rolled cigarette and, according to experts, contains three times the amount of nicotine and carbon monoxide than other cigarettes. According to NGOs and public health organisations participating in the study, the beedi industry prefers to engage children as their nimble fingers are more adept at rolling beedis.

The study gave an example of seven-year-old Madhabi Khatoon of West Bengal's Murshidabad district. Rolling beedis since she was five, Madhabi's nimble fingers can now roll 400 a day.
'Madhabi does not go to school or play with her friends, as her mother thinks earning is more important than education. She is among the many children whose childhood has been snatched away by the beedi industry,' said Binoy Matthew of the Voluntary Health Association of India (VHAI). 'Unless the government acts now, there is little hope for children like her,' he added.

The study says that children in this occupation are made to work up to 14 hours a day with no breaks or holidays and are forced to drop out of school. 'On the health front, because they are constantly exposed to hazardous chemicals and tobacco dust, these children suffer from tuberculosis, postural and eye problems, anaemia, lung and skin diseases,' the report said. 'After continuous beedi rolling and exposure to tobacco, the skin on the children's fingertips begins to thin, and they are unable to roll beedis by the age of 45. They have to resort to begging as they know no other trade or occupation,' it added.

Besides VHAI, child rights groups like CRY, Butterflies, Pratham, Save the Children, Bachpan Bachao Andolan and Unicef took part in the study. Suggesting reforms, the study said that the government should immediately enforce the provisions of Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act 1986 to prevent employment of children in beedi rolling or other hazardous occupations. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
issue- 778


#449 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Thu Nov 19, 2009 8:46 am
Subject: COPD fourth leading cause of deaths: expert
rhlkaka
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COPD fourth leading cause of deaths: expert
The Hindu, Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is the fourth leading cause of the death in the world, retired chest physician G. Kullayappa has said. Talking to reporters in connection with the celebrations of World COPD Day on November 18, Dr. Kullayappa said 30 lakh people died of the disease every year in the world while smoking was the major cause of the disease.

A smoker was exposed to 4,000 harmful substances contained in the cigarette. Dr. Kullayappa pointed out that out of 20 cigars smoked by a primary smoker, three would definitely be shared by other non-smokers. Even the passive smokers were exposed to health hazards, he said. As per the Indian standards, a COPD patient was spending Rs. 32,000 a year. If the victims quit smoking in the initial stage, the damage has chances of being reversible, he said.

Highest number

He said Chennai was considered the city having the highest number of smokers while the total number in the country going up to 250 million. The disease could be diagnosed under a simple lung function test. Read more....

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Thursday, 19 November 2009
issue-781


#450 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Tue Nov 24, 2009 11:25 am
Subject: Tobacco control laws not strictly enforced in State, says study
rhlkaka
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Tobacco control laws not strictly enforced in State, says study
The Hindu, Tiruvananthapuram, Kerala

[ To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
One year after the Union government enacted the smoke-free air law, restricting smoking in public places, to protect individuals from the harmful effects of second-hand smoke, it is observed more in the breach, according to an Air Quality Monitoring Study conducted in 16 cities across the country.

Among the cities in Kerala chosen for the study, Thiruvananthapuram emerged on top when it came to violation of the smoke-free air law, followed by Ernakulam and Alappuzha. It observed that at all bars and toddy shops that the study team visited in Kerala, the air pollution was nine to 20 times higher than the hazardous level. It found that the air quality in rural bars was more hazardous than that in urban bars.

The study was conducted by the Voluntary Health Association of India in September 2009, to help evaluate the quality of air in public places like restaurants, bars and pubs. The air quality study was conducted by measuring particulate air pollution from second-hand smoke in 33 different indoor hospitality locations like restaurants, bars and movie theatres during their peak business hours. All these locations were required to be smoke-free as per the law.

The air quality was measured by TSI Sidepak AM510 Personal Aerosol Monitors. The data collected was analysed by the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in New York, U.S. According to the law enacted by India to contain second-hand smoking — Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act — smoking is not allowed in enclosed public spaces. However, places serving 30 or more persons may allow smoking as long as dedicated smoking rooms (DSRs) have been set up. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
ank- 790


#451 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Wed Nov 25, 2009 11:27 am
Subject: Workshop on tobacco control
rhlkaka
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Workshop on tobacco control
The Hindu Chennai, Tamil Nadu

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
The significance of ensuring the psychological well-being of students, starting with those in schools, as a prime measure to keep them away from tobacco was emphasised by speakers at a workshop here on Monday.

The daylong workshop on tobacco control for Chennai Corporation officials, in charge of enforcing the ban on smoking in public places, was organised by the Directorate of Public Health. Doctors, who participated in the discussion, said bringing about "lifestyle changes" in the students would go a long way in stopping them from using tobacco.

The Director of Public Health S. Elango, who ran through the history of tobacco use, said that the first concerns about the effect on health was voiced in 1604, but the first study report on the ills of smoking was released in the US in 1964.

Referring to the studies done in Tamil Nadu to underscore the need to enforce the ban on smoking in public places, he said smoking affected not just the smokers but also others who are exposed to it. He said that seven per cent of children in the State use tobacco and one in three students were exposed to smoke in their own house and half of the students were exposed to smoke in public places. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 25 November 2009
Issue- 794


#452 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Tue Dec 1, 2009 11:30 am
Subject: Drop in smoking cuts cancer deaths in Europe
rhlkaka
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Drop in smoking cuts cancer deaths in Europe
Reuters India News, India

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
A decline in smoking in Europe and better screening mean fewer people are dying of cancer, but lung cancer deaths in women are rising in places like Scotland and Hungary where more women smoke, doctors said on Monday.

Early diagnosis and better treatments have pushed down deaths from cervical cancer and breast cancer, and declining smoking levels contributed to large falls in deaths from lung and other tobacco-related cancers in men, according to a study in the Annals of Oncology cancer journal.

The study of data from 1990-1994 and 2000-2004 showed overall European cancer death rates fell by nine percent in men and eight percent in women in the second period from the first.

But researchers said there were wide disparities in cancer death rates between different EU countries, and said some countries where alcohol and tobacco consumption has increased had seen a rise in deaths from lung, mouth, pharynx and oesophagus cancers.

"Further reduction of tobacco smoking remains the key priority for cancer control in Europe," Cristina Bosetti, head of the cancer unit at Italy's Mario Negri department of epidemiology, wrote in the study. Read more...

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Tuesday, 01 December 2009
issue- 804


#453 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Wed Dec 2, 2009 10:45 am
Subject: No smoking at IFFI venue, film stars told
rhlkaka
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No smoking at IFFI venue, film stars told
The Times of India, Panaji, Goa

[To read this news in Hindi Language, click here]

EXCERPT:
The National Organisation for Tobacco Eradication (NOTE) has taken objection to film stars smoking at the ongoing 40th International Film Festival of India (IFFI) venue here.

"Rajat Kapoor, Radhika Apte and other delegates were seen smoking within the INOX courtyard. This appeared in local newspapers. It is a violation of the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA) 2003 which is operative in Goa since Oct 2, 2008," Shekhar Salkar, the NOTE general secretary, said in a written complaint sent to the organisers.

The complaint was addressed to Manoj Srivastava, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Entertainment Society of Goa (ESG), the co-host for IFFI along with the Directorate of Film Festivals.

While Rajat is here to promote his English film "And Once Again" directed by Amol Palekar, Radhika stars along with Rahul Bose in Bengali film "Antaheen", a film screened at the festival's Indian Panorama section.

NOTE has said that it was the organisers' legal and moral responsibility to ensure that "film stars and VIPs not be seen smoking as the younger generation would imitate the actions of these heroes and become addicted to smoking which will damage their health". Read more....

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 02 December 2009
issue- 808


#454 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Thu Dec 3, 2009 9:17 am
Subject: Taking The Pulse of India's Health
bobbyramakant
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Taking The Pulse of India's Health

'Take Your Pulse' now. The online questionnaire requires about ten minutes to complete, and can be found at:
http://www.worldcarecouncil.org/content/taking-pulse-indias-health-civil-society-national-consultation


Dear Friends,

Greetings from the World Care Council (India)

We are writing to invite your participation in an innovative campaign towards building a democratic foundation for a 'healthier' India.

Taking the Pulse of India's Health is a series of National consultations to gather the opinions of Indians on their healthcare services of today, and their hopes and aspirations for the future.

These consultations use questionnaires or surveys that aim to reach out widely to 'hear the voices' of a broad base of the consumers of health services, and to encourage wider discussion of the issues raised.  Responding to the questions actively grows the 'stakeholding' of the public in health issues, which will contribute to improving both policy and practices across India.

Powered by partnerships, this new initiative has already brought together many civil society organizations and individuals in common cause, including the Public Health Foundation of India, India Business Alliance, Family Health International, and The Hindu among many others. Partners agree to fill in the questionnaire, to encourage the same within the workplace, and then to reach out to their contacts and communities to mobilize still more people to complete the survey.

So please 'Take Your Pulse' now. The online questionnaire requires about ten minutes to complete, and can be found at:

http://www.worldcarecouncil.org/content/taking-pulse-indias-health-civil-society-national-consultation

You will have to register and login to answer the survey, and to leave comments.

After completing the questionnaire, we ask you to help to spread the word by forwarding this mail and link to others so they too can participate.
Together, civil society is taking its own pulse, and forging a new tool for increasing 'democracy in health'.

Results will begin to be published online from the 10th of December, International Human Rights Day.

Thank you, and warm regards.

Celina D'Costa Menezes
President
World Care Council


More information can be found at:  http://www.worldcarecouncil.org/content/taking-pulse-indias-health
For requests for other language editions of the questionnaire, or to join the all-volunteer team that is Taking the Pulse forward,
just click to activate:  http://www.worldcarecouncil.org/contact

New Delhi, 1 December, 2009
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The World Care Council is a NGO registered in India, France and the Democratic Republic of Congo, that strives to raise the standards of care for people with Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and other communicable diseases. Driven by people living with HIV and/or TB, the World Care Council advances a Rights and Responsibilities approach to confronting these pandemics by influencing policy at the 'top', and mobilizing for implementation from the 'bottom'. The World Care Council practices the principles of greater and more meaningful involvement of people with the diseases, and welcomes the participation of all people seeking to improve the health and well being of their communities.  www.worldcarecouncil.org




#455 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Sat Dec 5, 2009 7:20 pm
Subject: Responding to TB, HIV, COPD and tobacco smoking needs coordinated approach
bobbyramakant
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Responding to TB, HIV, COPD and tobacco smoking needs coordinated approach

Tobacco smoking, TB, HIV and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are all burgeoning problems in resource poor settings. The evidence of their potentially devastating effects on global public health is increasing and they require a coordinated approach for control. These diseases all occur in predominantly resource-poor countries. They are perpetuated by poverty and inadequate resources and their control and management require coordinated approach for control, said delegates at the 40th Union World Conference on Lung Health, in Cancun, Mexico.

Statistically, there is 1 TB-related death that takes place every 18 seconds, 1 HIV death every 16 seconds and 1 smoking-related death every 13 seconds. The enormous public challenge posed by the combined epidemics of tobacco smoking, HIV, TB and COPD, is undoubtedly alarming. But is there a link between TB, HIV, COPD and tobacco smoking? Do they increase the risk of each other?

"At the beginning of 21st century we really are facing convergence of several epidemics like HIV, TB, COPD and tobacco smoking among others" said Richard N van Zyl-Smit work works with Lung Infection and Immunity Unit, Division of Pulmonology and UCT Lung Institute, Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, South Africa.

"Tobacco smoking is unquestionably the primary risk factor for COPD. The importance of "total burden of inhaled particles" (occupational, household, environmental) is increasing" said Richard.

"Smokers have two fold higher risk of developing active TB disease" said Dr Madhukar Pai from McGill University and Montreal Chest Institute in Canada. Dr Pai was referring to three meta-analysis studies from 2007/2008. "Tobacco smokers have 2 times more risk of dieing of TB" added Dr Pai, referring to the data from India. India has enormous tobacco use and COPD rates, and also the highest TB burden in the world. "It is not a universal estimate, and is population specific" cautioned Dr Pai, outlining the need for more research on the association between TB, tobacco smoking, COPD and HIV. "There is very little data to study association between TB and passive smoking" said Dr Pai. However there are studies to show that passive smoking escalates risk of developing active TB disease by three times. "How can passive smoking have higher risk (three times) for developing active TB disease than active smoking (two times), so we do need more data in this regard" said Dr Pai.

Tobacco smoke increases the risk of pneumonia, influenza, menningococcal meningitis, among others. Evidence is accumulating that smoking is a risk factor for TB. However there is no published data on the cellular interactions of tobacco smoke and mycobacterium tuberculosis, said Richard.

At least 15 more studies have been published since the three major meta-analyses in 2007/2008. All studies report a positive association between tuberculosis and tobacco smoking. Studies also show that current male smokers have a higher risk for active TB disease than former smokers. In a study conducted in India, 900 non-medical staff monitored 1.1 million people for 3 years for cause of death taking place in this population. TB was the biggest cause of death reported in this study in India, and 66% of those who died of TB during the study, were active smokers.

The risk to develop active TB disease is higher when tobacco smoking is combined with alcohol.

"Mortality rates, particularly from Asian countries suggest that there is an urgent need to target TB patients for smoking cessation interventions" said Dr Pai. However he stressed that tobacco cessation should be encouraged regardless in all disciplines of medicine because of proven public health outcomes.

The second edition of the International Standards of Tuberculosis Care (ISTC), which is an official component of the WHO Global Stop TB Strategy also mentions tobacco smoking cessation among other measures to improve TB treatment outcomes. The ISTC standard 17 says: "This plan should include assessment of and referrals for treatment of other illnesses with particular attention to those known to affect treatment outcome, for instance care for diabetes mellitus, drug and alcohol treatment programs, tobacco smoking cessation programs, and other psychosocial support services, or to such services as antenatal or well baby care.

Dr Donald Enarson stressed that tobacco smoking cessation is an important part of the comprehensive tobacco control programme, and not the only part. So all components of the comprehensive tobacco control measures should be implemented for improving public health outcomes. Dr Enarson was referring to MPOWER report from Tobacco Free Initiative (TFI) of WHO which outlines the MPOWER package, a set of six key tobacco control measures that reflect and build on the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC, global tobacco treaty). Another delegates remarked that MPOWER is in line with the global tobacco treaty - FCTC - and we should be demanding implementation of the treaty to which governments have committed to enforce. The WHO FCTC is the first public health and corporate accountability treaty, said a delegate from India. Comprehensive tobacco control programmes can yield major public health outcomes, as 30% of male TB patients die of tobacco smoking.

Although lethal association between tobacco smoking, COPD and TB was becoming clear, we needed more discussion on association between smoking with HIV. "Tobacco smoke increases the risk of human papiloma virus (HPV) and HPV increases the risk of HIV" said Richard in response to a question on the link between HIV and smoking.

Kristina Crothers from Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine in USA, shed more light on this association with HIV. She was referring to long term complications of HIV and progression to AIDS, which does get influenced by the above risk factors.

TB continues to be the biggest cause of mortality among people living with HIV (PLHIV) worldwide. However, HIV related long-term complications get aggravated by noxious agents which include tobacco smoke. The risk to develop pulmonary infections and respiratory tract colonization is also upped. The history of childhood illnesses, low socio-economic status, malnutrition among PLHIV does increase their vulnerability to further severe the HIV-related long-term complications. All these are contributing factors for PLHIV to develop chronic lung disease, and COPD in case of smokers, among other conditions that include fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension and lung cancer.

Kristina cited smoking prevalence among PLHIV in northern America. Although tobacco smoking prevalence among general population in USA is 22%, yet the tobacco smoking prevalence goes up among PLHIV to 54%.

In India, in a study conducted by Tuberculosis Research Centre at Madurai, the following results were reported: 66% of PLHIV men were smokers.

In another study, those PLHIV who reported 12 pack years of smoking, had 37% of emphysema, and those who reported 25 pack years of smoking, had 46% of emphysema.

"HIV is associated with chronic lung disease, particularly COPD" said Kristina. "This chronic lung disease can substantially contribute to morbidity and mortality" added Kristina. However long term impact of HIV infection on lung health is unknown, said she.

Studies show that smoking may impact progression to AIDS among PLHIV, said Kristina.

Although more research and data may further clarify the lethal synergy between the epidemics of TB, HIV, tobacco smoking and COPD, among other public health challenges, there is no doubt that collaboration between different single disease or health programmes will be truly beneficial and have major public health outcomes.



#456 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Wed Dec 23, 2009 4:15 am
Subject: CNS: Will cancer-stricken commissioner get justice on 14 January 2010?
bobbyramakant
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Will cancer-stricken commissioner get justice on 14 January 2010?
Kulsum Mustafa, CNS

Online at: www.citizen-news.org
 
Mumbai: The Commissioner of Customs at Mumbai, Deepak Kumar, and members of anti-tobacco lobby are anxiously looking forward to heralding in the New Year. On 14th January, 2010, will be pronounced a landmark judgment in the case that has already gone down in annals of history. Whatever the verdict the case is India's first such complaint to be filed by a serving officer.

Deepak Kumar has registered a case at Maharashtra Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission in Mumbai. on December 2.  He has demanded compensation of Rs. 1 Crore (INR 10 million or USD 200,000) from ITC Ltd, Kolkatta for severe physical damages, including loss of natural voice, incurred due to tobacco consumption without awareness of the dangers posed by the product.  

After nearly 40 years of regularly smoking cigarettes, he had developed throat cancer. Kumar's larynx – the voice box has been removed. So severe was his ailment that his treatment entailed two surgeries and radiation therapy, just to keep the cancer from spreading. The dream of the man who wanted to become an attorney after he retired from the Customs department today lies shattered. His resonant voice is gone Mr. Kumar can barely utter just a few words, and that also with great difficulty and after first covering the hole in his larynx with his palms. From his neck hangs a white gauze bib- an attempt to hide the gaping whole left by the surgery.

 "It is not money, it is not personal vendetta, I await this judgment because it is in larger interest of tobacco consumers. The consumer must know he is inhaling and chewing poison,"  Mr. Kumar told media persons at a national level media interaction organized in Mumbai by Healis Sekhsaria Institute for public Health.

The judgment Mr. Kumar hopes will make tobacco companies accountable, pressurize government bodies to curb tobacco products in India and make public aware of the ill effects of tobacco and draw attention to the hardships faced by users of tobacco.

"I have seen death, pain and suffering. On the hospital bed I took a vow- if I survive I will devote my entire life to anti-tobacco campaign. I do not want others to suffer what I have…... " says Mr. Kumar, his voice choked with emotions. Mr. Kumar was operated in the Tata Memorial Hospital in November 2008.

Not able to take on the strain of speaking through prosthetic voice box Mr. Kumar addressed the media through power point presentation. He went on to describe his journey from a 16 year old boy, thrilled and excited at smoking his first cigarette. In the next 40 years the number increased to 40 sticks a day. In those days there was no warning about cigarette smoking being injurious to health. This came to be printed on cigarette packs only in mid eighties. "If I had made an informed choice 40 years ago, it would be a different story. But when I began smoking, which started as just a cigarette or two during my pre-college and early college days, there were no warnings. Nothing. How could I -- or the millions of others in India who started then -- have known that cigarette smoking is more addictive than heroin? It was intentionally made glamorous, through marketing. I used to smoke Wills Navy Cut, an ITC brand. I'll never forget that advertisement campaign they ran: a beautiful young girl, a handsome young man, and between them a pack of Wills Navy Cut. The slogan? Made for each other," said Mr. Kumar in a remorseful voice.

"More than anything, I regret smoking that first cigarette. Ultimately, it ruined my life. How many more lives must be ruined by tobacco in this country?" he asks, adding that education and awareness for the people is the most important step especially in India which has more tobacco users than almost any country in the world.

Kulsum Mustafa, CNS
(The author is a senior journalist and Secretary-General of Media Nest. She is a Fellow of Citizen News Service (CNS) Writers' Bureau)




#457 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Mon Jan 4, 2010 5:48 am
Subject: Flashback 2009
bobbyramakant
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Dear member,

Wish you a very happy new year 2010 and beyond. To read Flashback 2009 on issues that hit the CNS headlines, click here  or go to: http://www.jay-inspire.com/NewYearGreetings2010.html

Thanks for your support and participation on TambakooKills eGroup.

TambakooKills eGroup team



#458 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Thu Jan 7, 2010 5:40 am
Subject: 2010 is Year of the Lungs
bobbyramakant
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2010 is Year of the Lungs
[To read this post in Hindi language , click here ]
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The year 2010 was declared as year of the lungs to recognize that hundreds of millions of people around the world suffer each year from treatable and
preventable chronic respiratory diseases. This initiative acknowledges that lung health has long been neglected in public discourses, and understands the need to unify different health advocates behind one purpose of lung health, informed Dr Nils Billo, Chair of the Forum of International Respiratory Societies (FIRS).BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5412212065396853794

The FIRS partners include the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), American Thoracic Society (ATS), Asian Pacific Society of Respirology (APSR), Asociacion Latinoamericana de Torax (ALAT), European Respiratory Society (ERS), Pan African Thoracic Society and American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP).

Earlier last year, the New York Times carried a series of articles on different parts of human body, but forgot the lungs! It is difficult to remain alive without lungs for more than few seconds!

The Declaration signed by the partners of the Forum of International Respiratory Societies (FIRS) at the 40th Union World Conference on Lung Health last year read as following:
[Begin]
WE NOTE WITH GRAVE CONCERN THAT:
Hundreds of millions of people around the world suffer each year from treatable and preventable respiratory diseases, including tuberculosis (TB), asthma, lung cancer, H1N1, pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
WE RECOGNIZE THAT:
Despite the magnitude of suffering and death caused by lung disease, lung health has long been neglected in public discourse and in public health decisions.
WE CALL UPON OUR PARTNERS TO:
Enact smoking cessation legislation and programs to reduce the prevalence and stigma of tobacco-related lung diseases.
[Ends]

There are a range of health and environmental factors that affect our lung health. This includes tuberculosis (TB), tobacco smoke, biomass fuel smoke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, pneumonia among other respiratory infections. The evidence of their potentially devastating effects on global public health is increasing and they require a coordinated approach for control. These diseases all occur in predominantly resource-poor countries. They are perpetuated by poverty and inadequate resources and their control and management require coordinated approach among health programmes at all levels.

Statistically, there is 1 TB-related death that takes place every 18 seconds, 1 HIV death every 16 seconds, 1 child dies of pneumonia every 15 seconds and 1 smoking-related death every 13 seconds. The enormous public challenge posed by the combined epidemics of tobacco smoking, HIV, TB and COPD, is undoubtedly alarming.

More than 2 billion people or a third of the world's total population, are infected with mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis is now the world's seventh-leading cause of death. It killed 1.8 million people worldwide last year, up from 1.77 million in 2007. It is one of the three primary diseases that are closely linked to poverty, the other two being AIDS and malaria.

Tobacco smoking is unquestionably the primary risk factor for COPD. More than 5 million deaths are attributed to tobacco use every year. Smokers have two fold higher risk of developing active TB disease. Tobacco smokers have 2 times more risk of dieing of TB. Tobacco smoke increases the risk of pneumonia, influenza, menningococcal meningitis, among others. Evidence is accumulating that smoking is a risk factor for TB. However there is no published data on the cellular interactions of tobacco smoke and mycobacterium tuberculosis. The risk to develop active TB disease is higher when tobacco smoking is combined with alcohol.

Dr Donald Enarson stressed that tobacco smoking cessation is an important part of the comprehensive tobacco control programme, and not the only part. So all components of the comprehensive tobacco control measures should be implemented for improving public health outcomes. Dr Enarson was referring to MPOWER report from Tobacco Free Initiative (TFI) of WHO which outlines the MPOWER package, a set of six key tobacco control measures that reflect and build on the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC, global tobacco treaty). Another delegates remarked that MPOWER is in line with the global tobacco treaty - FCTC - and we should be demanding implementation of the treaty to which governments have committed to enforce. The WHO FCTC is the first public health and corporate accountability treaty, said a delegate from India. Comprehensive tobacco control programmes can yield major public health outcomes, as 30% of male TB patients die of tobacco smoking.

Asthma is yet another major lung health challenge. It is a chronic disease that affects airways. When people have asthma, the inside walls of their airways become sore and swollen. That makes them very sensitive, and they may react strongly to things that they are allergic to or find irritating. When airways react, they get narrower and lungs get less air. This can cause wheezing, coughing, chest tightness and trouble breathing, especially early in the morning or at night. When asthma symptoms become worse than usual, it's called an asthma attack. In a severe asthma attack, the airways can close so much that vital organs do not get enough oxygen. People can die from severe asthma attacks.

More than 300 million people around the world have asthma, and the disease imposes a heavy burden on individuals, families, and societies. The Global Burden of Asthma Report, indicates that asthma control often falls short and there are many barriers to asthma control around the world. Proper long-term management of asthma will permit most patients to achieve good control of their disease. Yet in many regions around the world, this goal is often not met. Poor asthma control is also seen in the lifestyle limitations experienced by some people with asthma. For example, in some regions, up to one in four children with asthma is unable to attend school regularly because of poor asthma control. Asthma deaths are the ultimate, tragic evidence of uncontrolled asthma.

According to the Global Burden of Asthma Report, the majority of asthma deaths in some regions of the world are preventable. Effective asthma treatments exist and, with proper diagnosis, education, and treatment, the great majority of asthma patients can achieve and maintain good control of their disease. When asthma is under control, patients can live full and active lives.

Pneumonia claims two million children under five each year, yet no new drug, vaccine or special diagnostic test is needed to save their lives. The answers are at hand, and effective treatment is both inexpensive and widely available.

Host of other conditions that affect the lungs, are preventable, and often treatable.

Let us hope that 2010 Year of The Lung initiative of FIRS succeeds in putting the spotlight on the long neglected part of human body which New York Times missed, the lungs.

Bobby Ramakant, CNS
-------------

To download or read the English  version, go to: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/01/2010-is-year-of-lungs.html

To download or read the Hindi  version, go to: http://hindi-cns.blogspot.com/2009/12/blog-post_24.html




#459 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Sat Jan 9, 2010 8:20 am
Subject: April-November tobacco exports up 10%
rhlkaka
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April-November tobacco exports up 10%
The Hindu Business Line, New Delhi, Delhi

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
India's tobacco exports soared 10 per cent to 1,76,438 tonnes till November this fiscal buoyed by overseas demand amid stable prices here, the Tobacco Board said. The country, which is the third largest tobacco exporter in the world, had sold 1,60,511 tonnes in the global market in the year-ago period, it said.

"The export was upbeat as there was constant demand from the European Union (EU) and other countries. The steady price trend also helped importers to place more orders towards 2009-end," a senior Board official said. As a result, tobacco exports in November 2009 rose to 15,915 tonnes from 13,014 tonnes in the same period previous year, he said.

Of the total exports during April-November period in 2009-0, raw tobacco stood at 1,57,550 tonnes, while manufactured products like bidi and cigarettes were at about 18,888 tonnes, according to the Board data. Read more...

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Tambakookills News Bulletin
Saturday, 09 January 2010
Issue-840


#460 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Tue Jan 12, 2010 5:11 am
Subject: India atop the world tuberculosis chart (HT)
bobbyramakant
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News: India atop the world tuberculosis chart
The Hindustan Times
**********************

"PREVALENCE OF XDR-TB IS NOT EXACTLY KNOWN IN INDIA BECAUSE OF LACK OF QUALITY DRUG SUSCEPTIBILITY TEST FOR SECOND LINE DRUGS"

India has the highest incidence of tuberculosis cases in the wrold. It accounts for more than 1/5th of the global TB cases, said Professor Rajendra Prasad, head of Pulmonary Medicine Department at CSM Medical University.

Prof Prasad said this while speaking at the Dr I Venkat Rao Oration Award 2009 of Indian Medical Association. He delivered the oration at the inaugural function of 84th All India Medical Conference held at Hyderabad a week back.

"As per current estimate of World Health Organization (WHO), 2.4 per cent untreated TB patients and 14.7 per cent previously treated patients had multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Approximately 500,000 cases of MDR-TB emerge every year globally. Of this India and China account for more than 50 per cent cases" he said.

International Governor of American College of Chest Physicians (USA) for North India, Prof Prasad, said about 1,30,132 MDR-TB cases emerge every year in India and 40,000 extensively drug resistant TB (XDR-TB) cases emerge every year globally.

"55 countries of the world have already reported at least one XDR-TB case. Prevalence of XDR-TB cases are not exactly known in India because of lack of quality assured drug susceptibility test for 2nd line of drugs. Thus this needs attention from policy makers" he said. However, he said, isolated cases have been reported from TRC Chennai, Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai, AIIMS Delhi, New Delhi TB Centre, and CSMMU Lucknow.

Prof Prasad emphasized that to control MDR/XDR-TB, all sensitive and MDR-TB cases must receive proper and adequate treatment in public as well as in private sector.

"If proper treatment is not provided, TB bacilli will develop drug resistance to all the available drugs and tuberculosis may become untreatable as it was in pre-chemotherapy era before 1950" he cautioned.

Online at: http://tapedik.blogspot.com/2010/01/news-india-atop-world-tuberculosis.html


#461 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Tue Jan 12, 2010 1:18 pm
Subject: Cig puff can give wife an ugly face
rhlkaka
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Cig puff can give wife an ugly face
Gaurav Saigal, Hindustan Times, Lucknow, Uttar पà¥à¤°à¤¦à¥‡à¤¶

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
LUCKNOW : Beware,smokers!Your puff may give your wife an ugly face. Dermatology experts feel the cigarette soot has enough ammo to damage your face and neck skin. In Fact, it can damage your wife's beauty protection and turn her face her permanently ugly.

"It not only damages body organs such as lungs but also saps off your skin strength. It is similar to what happens after an excessive exposure to the sun-the skin is tanned and it gradually gets wrinkly dry" said Dr Suresh Talwar, organising secretary of DERMACON 2010. Experts said the glow of the skin depends upon the flow of blood in the vessels.But carbon particles of cigarette smoke block the vessels giving the skin a darker look. Passive smoking initially speeds up ageing resulting into wrinkles on the face and in the later stage it can lead up to asthma, a disease connected with smokers.

Dr Sangeet Amladi, former professor of dermatoloyat sion KEM and Nair Hospital, Mumbai and hesd (medical) of Kaya skin Clinic Mumbai said, "Passive smoking which most of the women are victim when men beside them light a cigarette, not only mskes skin excessively dry but also adversely affects blood vessels yoo," Dr Amladi said passive smoking makes the victim inhale an equal quantiy of smoke as those puffing. Since skin of womes is tender, the damage is far ahead than in man. Experts said though pollutants are present all over the earth's surface but passive smoking is dangerous in the sense that majority women do not take precaution for it happens inside house or even while going in a car.

Smoking cigarettes ages skin faster than anything else spart from sun damage,"said Dr Talwar. Skin damage from passive smoking is so subtle that women fail to recognize it in the initial stage. So there should be no gentle way to ask smokers around to stop, said Dr Amladi. Read more.....

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Monday, 11 January 2010
issue-843


#462 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Wed Jan 20, 2010 9:31 am
Subject: Tobacco control kit for lawmakers
rhlkaka
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Tobacco control kit for lawmakers
The Assam Tribune, Golaghat, Assam

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
The Voluntary Health Association of Assam (VHAA), Guwahati convened a meeting to release the Assamese edition of an information kit for Parliamentarians, legislators and bureaucrats. The main objective of the kit is to familiarise them with provisions and measures that can be initiated by them for effective implementation and enforcement of the Cigarettes and Other Robacco Products Act (COTPA), 2003.

The kit was released on January 9 by Member of Parliament Deep Gogoi, Ajanta Neog,, PWD Minister and local MLA of Golaghat and HN Bora, deputy commissioner, Golaghat at a meeting held at the District Library auditorium, Golaghat in the presence of other eminent officials and citizens. Read more....

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
Issue-858


#463 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Tue Jan 26, 2010 10:24 am
Subject: Gutkha tops tobacco addicts' list of habits
rhlkaka
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Gutkha tops tobacco addicts' list of habits
Daily News And Analysis, Ahmedabad, Gujarat

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
According to a recent survey, Gutkha is the favourite among tobacco consumers. Almost 42% of the people surveyed preferred to chew on Gutkha. Another matter of concern is that only 34% of tobacco users in Ahmedabad are aware of the pictorial warnings and drawbacks of chewing tobacco. These facts came to fore when Gujarat Voluntary Health Association (GVHA) conducted a pilot survey in the city, to find out the status of enforcement of Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act, (COTPA) 2003, in Ahmedabad. The survey also states that 70% of government offices that were part of the survey did not display the statuary signage for ban on smoking in the office. Other places like malls, schools, hospitals also failed to put up the signage.

The sample size of the survey was 150 and around 20 odd places were taken into account for the survey which was done on a pilot-project basis and took around one and half months. The NGO also plans to replicate the survey at district and maybe at state level too. Commenting on the findings of the survey, at the awareness workshop held on Thursday, project manager of GVHA, Mihir Dave said "Most educational institutions were not displaying the mandatory warning on prohibition of sale of any kind of tobacco product within 100 yards of the institutions."

Dave further said, "Despite the fact that smoking in public places was prohibited with effect from October 2, 2008, most government offices are yet to display the mandatory "No smoking" sign in their respective premises." Sharing the findings of the survey, president of GVHA, Geeta Raval said that most of the tobacco addicts started consuming tobacco in various forms before they turned 18. Most of them were unaware of the ill effects of tobacco consumption at the time when they started consuming tobacco products. Most of the tobacco consumers interviewed were not only unaware of the ban on smoking in public places but were also of the pictorial warning on tobacco product packs.Read more...

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Issue-865


#464 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Thu Jan 28, 2010 11:14 am
Subject: BP control abnormal in newborns of smokers
rhlkaka
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BP control abnormal in newborns of smokers
The Times of India, New Delhi, Delhi

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
Swedish researchers reported in Hypertension, Journal of the American Heart Association that newborns of women who smoked during pregnancy show signs of circulatory dysfunction in the first few weeks of life that get worse throughout the first year. The blood pressure response to tilting the infants upright during sleep, a test of how the body copes with repositioning, was dramatically different in infants born to smoking mothers compared to those born to nonsmoking parents, the study found.

Infants not exposed to tobacco experienced only a 2 percent increase in blood pressure when they were tilted upright at one week of age and later a 10 percent increase in blood pressure at one year. Infants of smoking mothers had the reverse, a 10 percent increase in blood pressure during a tilt at one week and only a 4 percent increase at one year. At three months and one year, the heart rate response to tilting in the tobacco-exposed infants was abnormal and highly exaggerated, researchers reported. Read more...

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Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Thursday, 28 January 2010
issue- 868


#465 From: Lung Health <Tambakoo.Kills@...>
Date: Sat Jan 30, 2010 9:26 am
Subject: Cancer patient treated for TB!
bobbyramakant
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Cancer patient treated for TB!
Gaurav Saigal, The Hindustan Times
30 January 2010

[To read Hindi version of this news, click here  or go to: http://stoptb.citizen-news.org/2010/01/blog-post.html ]
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The below news is about a boy who had to take anti-TB medicines due to misdiagnosis, he was actually suffering from cancer. Luckily after two years of mistreatment, he was finally rightly diagnosed and treated - and is safe and recovering.

Members are welcome to share their experiences with TB getting misdiagnosed in their local contexts, and its impact on drug-resistance and public health at large. Thanks]
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Wrong diagnosis forced eight-year old Adarsh Kumar Tiwari to quit studies. 80 per cent of cancer patients are victims of delayed diagnosis in India, said Dr MC Pant, former medical adviser to Uttarakhand government.

Suffering with Hodgson's Lymphoma - a type of cancer Adarsh was diagnosed and treated for tuberculosis by the doctors roughly for two years. This developed the cancer in him to near fatal stage three.

After roaming in different government and private hospitals for two years he was admitted to Balrampur Hospital on February 16, 2009. For next 10-months he remained under treatment here but was compelled to stop going to school due to treatment schedules. On Friday, doctors of the Balrampur Hospital, who finally treated the child, declared Adarsh was out of danger and could lead a normal life. But for the little one, two years of his life are gone. "When he came to us the boy had undergone all major tests and treatment for tuberculosis, malaria and other such related diseases. Our diagnosis fortunately was correct" said Dr GK Singh, senior paediatrician at Balrampur Hospital.

The case, Dr Singh said, though was not difficult to diagnose for lymph nodes could be located both in his neck and lower abdomen but was difficult to treat as the cancer was of stage III (B). This type of cancer happens to five among 10 lakh children and this was first such case at Balrampur Hospital.

Till November (roughly 10 months) Adarsh remained under medical treatment and was given chemotherapy. Finally he has been declared as treated. "We spent over Rs 40,000 (about USD 850) in two years on diagnostic tests, medicines and doctors fee" said Adarsh's mother Renu Tiwari who is now planning to send her son again to school.

Online at: http://stoptb.citizen-news.org/2010/01/cancer-patient-treated-for-tb.html

(Published in The Hindustan Times, Lucknow on 30 January 2010: credit-line: Gaurav Saigal, HT Staff Writer)

To read a Hindi translation , go to: http://stoptb.citizen-news.org/2010/01/blog-post.html



#466 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Thu Feb 4, 2010 5:57 am
Subject: World Cancer Day: Tobacco control is most cost-effective way to prevent cancer
bobbyramakant
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Tobacco control is most cost-effective way to prevent cancer

Professor (Dr) Rama Kant

The Hindustan Times, 4 February 2010- Special on World Cancer Day:

[To read a related post in Hindi language, click here ]

Most public health programmes of the Government of India are directed towards communicable diseases such as malaria, filaria, polio, tuberculosis and leprosy etc. The occurrence of certain diseases due to lifestyle changes like diabetes, respiratory/cardiac diseases, tobacco related disease and cancer, has now been recognized, and public health programmes are also being initiated against them. But these are few and far between. Life style diseases have a peculiar "follow others" ingredient which becomes still more complicated due to ignorance, especially in families where the elders have addictions and wrong eating habits, and the youngsters are exposed to the "role model" phenomenon. In many situations elders tell children that tobacco is bad for children and the latter are confused as to how it is bad for them and good for others. This ambiguity, coupled with peer pressure proves to be disastrous for the youth.

Most important part of all this is that the diseases and death caused by these life style aberrations are preventable.
Smoking And Tobacco Related Cancers

Lung Cancer                             
 Lung cancer is one fatal but preventable life-style disease. Smoking causes 90% of lung cancer. Non-smokers who breathe in other peoples' tobacco smoke, known as second-hand smoke, are also at an increased risk of lung cancer. Children and teenagers exposed to second hand smoke may be particularly at risk of lung cancer later in life as well as an increased risk of asthma and other respiratory problems.

Mouth and Throat cancer
Oral cancer is the most common cancer in India.  Smoking is a major cause of cancers of the oral cavity (tongue, lips, gums) oesophagus and larynx.

Majority of oral cancers occur because of chewing Tobacco, gutka etc.
 According to Dr Geoff Craig "People are dying of oral cancer because of ignorance".  There are about 7,00,000 new cases of cancers every year in India out of which tobacco related cancers are about 3,00,000. Cost of treatment of one oral cancer patient  is about Rs 3.5 lacs. This can be completely prevented by simple changes in lifestyle and regular screening. About 2000 deaths a day in India are tobacco related.

Cancer of the pancreas, stomach and kidney   
Smoking is also, at least a contributory and, may be, a causal factor in the development of cancer of the pancreas and of the kidney. When you inhale cigarette smoke, you will always swallow some of it , Consequently, the risk of developing stomach cancer is higher among smokers.

Cancer of uterus, cervix, colon and bladder
Apart from these, smoking has been found to increase the risk of uterine cancer, cancer of the cervix, cancer of the colon and bladder.

Other health hazards attributed to tobacco use
Smokers and tobacco chewers are also at an increased risk of developing myeloid leukaemia., especially oral sub mucous fibrosis.

This condition is characterized by limited opening of mouth and burning sensation on eating of spicy food. This is a progressive lesion in which the opening of the mouth becomes progressively limited, and later on even normal eating becomes difficult. It occurs almost exclusively in India and Indian communities living abroad. Tobacco when kept in mouth leaches out potent carcinogens. Habit of smoking is also equally dangerous. Treatment is surgery, and in advanced cases surgery followed by radiation therapy. 70% of the cases after treatment comeback with relapse and the ultimate result is death. The cost of the treatment is Rs.3.5 lacs on an average and in spite of this high cost there is no guarantee of total cure.

Therefore the most important aspect is PREVENTION. Use of tobacco in smoking or chewing or any other form must be stopped immediately.

The Government of the State of Maharashtra, India, had initiated a campaign against smok ing in 1986. The first reaction of smokers, mostly from urban upper-middle classes, was "We smoke because we like it. It is none of your concern. After all, it is we who would suffer, not you". Indian Society against smoking in UP and also state of Maharashtra initiated anti tobacco programs in public gatherings etc. WHO came forward to help people by introducing aggressive anti tobacco campaigns through establishment of Tobacco cessation clinics in several states.

Tobacco-related deaths outnumber those caused by AIDS, car accidents, alcohol, homicides, illegal drugs, suicides, and fires, combined.. Fortunately, the past decade has been one in which data concerning predictors of tobacco use initiation and approaches to tobacco use prevention have been accumulating.

Factors that influence the onset of smoking are complex and numerous, and a better understanding of these factors is needed to reduce the rate of smoking. Younger individuals with less fortunate socio economic backgrounds and from single-parent homes are at higher risk of initiating smoking and experimenting with cigarettes and smokeless tobacco. On the other hand, adolescents who have friends and parents who smoke are significantly more likely to initiate smoking themselves. Moreover, several psychological factors, including higher rates of depression and sociability, have been linked with a higher probability that an adolescent will start smoking. Lastly, the impact of the tobacco industry's targeting of adolescents with aggressive advertising, marketing, promotional campaigns, and sponsorships on youth smoking initiation rates should not be overlooked. Women, minorities, blue-collar workers, adolescents, and even children are bombarded by clever and often insidious marketing and advertising gimmicks. In fact, a strong correlation between smoking rates among adolescents and sales promotion expenditures by tobacco companies has been documented.

Prevention initiatives need to have two thrusts: (1) school-based programs, and (2) community-wide approaches.

School-based programs encourage students who have yet to experiment with tobacco to abstain from use through (1) enforcement of anti tobacco policies (e.g., prohibitions against tobacco use and tobacco advertising on campus); (2) education about the adverse health and social consequences of tobacco use (e.g., cancer risk, exacerbation of asthma, stained teeth and foul-smelling breath and clothing, and ostracism by non smoking peers); (3) education regarding the reasons that adolescents smoke (e.g., peer acceptance, stress management) and about alternative methods for attaining such goals; (4) education concerning the social influences on smoking, such as media, adults, and peers, and strategies for resisting such influences (e.g., refusal skills, assertiveness); (5) the use of teachers and peer leaders as health counselors; and (6) support for students who abstain from smoking as well as for those students who have quit. A meta-analysis of school-based prevention studies showed that programs involving peer and social elements can reduce adolescent smoking rates by as much as 30%.

Community-wide smoking prevention programs involve approaches that include counter advertising (e.g., antismoking billboard ads) and anti tobacco policies (i.e., restricting access, raising taxes, instituting bans). Evaluations of the benefits of counter advertising media campaigns suggest that this approach can effectively reduce smoking initiation rates.

The past few years have witnessed a burgeoning of anti tobacco legislation. Initiatives to restrict access to tobacco among children and adolescents are being strengthened.  Evaluations of the effects of work-site and hospital smoking bans indicate that cigarette consumption is significantly reduced by such policies, with the rate of second-hand smoke exposure completely eliminated. Although studies have yet to evaluate the impact on cessation rates of restaurant and bar smoking bans, such policies undoubtedly eliminate exposure to second-hand smoke for others sitting there.

Over the past decade, the growing national commitment to reducing the prevalence of tobacco use has resulted in a substantial growth in the scientific literature and availability of clinical interventions concerning the promotion of smoking cessation and prevention. Never before has there been a more hospitable climate for conducting empirical research into the determinants and treatment of tobacco addiction and for the implementation of cessation and prevention programs. Today, the commitment to support tobacco control research and initiatives from federal and state government agencies and from private granting institutes has never been stronger

Yet, despite many advances in treating tobacco addiction and preventing initiation of tobacco use, the rate of decline in smoking among adults has slowed down, and the prevalence of tobacco use has actually increased, especially chewing  tobacco. More research and wider availability of cessation and prevention initiatives are necessary if there is any hope of eradicating tobacco use among our population. Specifically, the psychosocial and socio demographic determinants of smoking initiation must be systematically identified. Further, additional research concerning genetic and gene-environment interaction determinants of tobacco addiction is essential. Finally, since current data indicate that optimal cessation programs can produce modest 20 to 40% cessation rates at best, a greater emphasis on evaluating more comprehensive, multi-component cessation interventions could greatly improve upon current efficacy. Counselling by clinical psychologists, of those addicted to tobacco along with pharmacotherapy can assist in this difficult task.

Professor (Dr) Rama Kant
(The author is Professor and Head of Department of Surgery, CSM Medical University (CSMMU - upgraded King George's Medical College - KGMC) and International Awardee of World Health Organization (WHO) for the year 2005. He is the Director of Tobacco Control Resource Centre. Email: ramakant@..., web: www.ramakant.org )




#467 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Thu Feb 4, 2010 5:41 pm
Subject: Remembering Pundit PK Shankhdhar 'Babooji'
bobbyramakant
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Remembering Pundit PK Shankhdhar 'Babooji'
-------------------------------------------

My first impressionable memory of Pundit Pradyumna Kishore Shankhdhar, whom we
respectfully called 'Babooji', was of him in his UNICEF office. He used to cycle
down to the office everyday - which stood starkly in contrast to the world's
finest limousines parked in this office, to which he was possibly entitled to
use. The attitude to save every penny possible, sacrifice all material comforts
and live frugally, and invest all possible resources in order to give a better
tomorrow for his family was a mission for Babooji.

"It's easier to fill books on philosophy than it is to bring one principle in
practice" had said Lev Tolstoi. Babooji lived up to this principle in his life.

By God's grace, it took about two generations to get to see the fruits of
Babooji's efforts. If the vision and courage of Babooji wasn't rock solid, it
would have been impossible to even imagine an enviable future for a man who was
then settled in a backward village of Badaun in UP. As a matter of fact, what
Babooji could make happen is a daunting challenge for many of us settled in
metropolitan cities! It is not an exaggeration to refer to the wise words "a
coward is dead in life, a hero is alive in death" when I remember Babooji today.
He breathed his last on 5 February 1996.

Babooji's fortitude and infinite patience to wait for that morning when his
dreams will bear fruits, complemented by boundless support from his wife,
Bhabbhi (she passed away on 21 December 2006); another relative whom we all
respectfully refer to as 'Mausiji'; and the persistent perseverance of his
children who were motivated enough to not only dare-to-dream but also to chase
their dreams with dedication, diligence and seemingly infinite persistence, were
indeed phenomenal in bringing in the desired change. Not only Babooji, Bhabbhi
and Mausiji sacrificed their personal and material aspirations, but also the
childhood and probably the youth of their children slipped away while they were
toiling hard, as hard as possible, to breathe life into the dreams they had the
courage to dream together in that small hamlet in Allahabad. Instilling human
values and an overwhelming sense of responsibility in the defining years of his
children was a foremost priority for Babooji.

My association with Babooji grew when Pooja and I got our cycle - and he cycled
5-7 kilometres to come to our place and take that cycle to his repair shop
regularly. After retiring from UNICEF, he volunteered to help strengthen
healthcare services at his son's place - and it is impossible to imagine and put
it in words how humbly, passionately and simply he could play his role. To
reflect back 20 years later, I guess he had redefined his life, his role and his
identity. His role was not of a boss, which he was with due respect and
authority, but that of a mentor - to everyone - from the security guard to the
head of the institution. He also subtly gave an unforgettable message not to
cling in life, because when we cling, we suffer in pain. After retiring from
UNICEF, he didn't cling rather found more relevant roles and responsibilities to
take care of.

Babooji would be content to see how his children and grandchildren have taken
the mantle forward in providing healthcare in top-notch institutions in India -
from CSM Medical University (erstwhile King George's Medical College) and Sanjay
Gandhi Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences (SGPGIMS) to Tata Memorial
Hospital in Mumbai. With a series of International and national awards and
accolades in Babooji's family, the manner in which this ordinary man lived his
life in an extraordinary way stands out more vividly.

This is certainly not an obituary, it can never be. Whenever we serve in the
true spirit of Babooji, he comes to life again. It is our responsibility to keep
the values he personified, alive, so do I believe.

- one of Babooji's grandchildren

#468 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Sat Feb 6, 2010 9:32 am
Subject: No smoking’ drive to be stepped up in city
rhlkaka
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No smoking' drive to be stepped up in city
The Hindi, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
The installation of signage with instructions to avoid smoking in public places will form a part of the efforts by the Coimbatore Corporation to step up its drive to turn the entire city into a `no smoking' area.

"There will be 100 per cent coverage of all public places in terms of installing the signage. We are following the World Health Organisation guidelines to create a totally smoking-free city," Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra says.

WHO mandates that there should not be even one instance of public smoking if the city has to be declared a smoking-free area. "When a survey is done, no case of public smoking should be found. And, no cigarette butt should be found on roads or other public places during the conservancy operations in the morning," the Commissioner explains. Read more...

-------------------------------------------------
Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Saturday, 06 February 2010
issue-872


#469 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Sat Feb 13, 2010 12:47 pm
Subject: Tobacco service charge set to treble next year
rhlkaka
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Tobacco service charge set to treble next year
Business Standard, Tamil Nadu/Karnataka

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
The Tobacco Board has warned tobacco growers service charges would rise three-fold next year if they cultivated the crop unauthorisedly. "The government has issued an order to this effect," an official of the Central Tobacco Board said on Wednesday. "The service charges, at 5 per cent this year, will treble next year. It will be deducted from the amount paid to growers for their tobacco crop. We have started warning growers," he told Business Standard.

The board sets the service charge periodically. Till 2004, it ranged from 5 per cent to 30 per cent, and 5 per cent to 15 per cent subsequently. For the 2009 crop, the auction for which is in progress now, 5 per cent service charge and Re 1 penalty per kg is collected. The penalty will be Rs 2 and the service charge 15 per cent for the 2010 crop.

Board's regional manager M A Haq said so far 85 million kg of tobacco has been sold in the auction and the board hopes to touch 100 million kg, as the cultivation of tobacco including unauthorised, was around 115 million kg. Auction have been held on 11 platforms in Karnataka since September 2.

The amount marketed in 2008 was 109.71 million kg, in 2007 59.23 million kg and in 2006 55.94 million kg. India is the world's second biggest tobacco producer/exporter, with a major part of it coming from Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. In Karnataka, around 52,000 farmers cultivated tobacco and about 15,000 do so without permits, an official added.

In the ongoing auction, the highest grade tobacco was fetching Rs 155.20 a kg, while the low grade was yielding Rs 45 a kg, the official said. On allegations of corruption by board officials, Haq said action was being taken against those found guilty. The board would not hesitate to act if specific complaints were lodged with the board. Welcoming the fixation of lower tax and penalty this year, Karnataka State Tobacco Growers' Action Committee Mysore District Honorary President Harihara Anandaswamy alleged ryot leaders were harassing cultivators and collecting Rs 500 to Rs 1,000 from them. Some corrupt field and marketing officers were involved, he alleged and urged the board, the Vigilance Commission and/or the Lok Ayukta to initiate action against those officials. Read more....

-----------------------------------------------------
Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Saturday, 13 February 2010
issue- 880


#470 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Sat Feb 20, 2010 6:30 am
Subject: Government all set to ban FDI in tobacco
rhlkaka
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Government all set to ban FDI in tobacco
The Economic Times, New Delhi, Delhi

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
India is just a step away from banning foreign investment in tobacco, shattering the plans of Japan Tobacco, BAT and the Altria Group, but leaving the field wide open for ITC to increase its dominance in the growing cigarette market. Finance minister Pranab Mukherjee, who was the last hurdle for the proposal from the health ministry, is now supporting the controversial ban, said a senior ministry official who is aware of the development. The finance ministry communicated its support to the ban through a communication dated February 3, 2010.

The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) will now approach the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, or CCEA, the final authority, for the formal approval to ban foreign investments in tobacco. "We were awaiting finance ministry's views on this matter," said KK Modi, president and MD of the second-largest tobacco company, Godfrey Philips India, where Altria Group owns a 25% stake and the Indian promoters 46%. "Banning it permanently will give a jolt to the foreign players."

After an acrimonious relationship spanning several years, the two have buried the hatchet and the local joint venture now has the right to manufacture the iconic Marlboro in India. Before that, it was sold through a separate company. The move to ban foreign investments in tobacco has been controversial since the proposal came soon after Japan Tobacco announced its intention to raise its stake in the local unit to 74% from 50%. Also, British American Tobacco, the single largest shareholder in ITC, has seen its desire to take a controlling stake in the Indian unit thwarted consistently without any adequate reasoning. BAT holds about 32% in ITC, and the government-controlled LIC and Unit Trust of India's government administrator are the other big shareholders.

The proposed ban may shut the door permanently on Japan Tobacco's proposal to invest $100 million into its Indian subsidiary. Its proposal has been pending with the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for about two years at least since the health ministry had proposed a ban on FDI in this sector. The tobacco giant, owned by the Japanese government, had said that the proposal complies with the FDI policy since the new investment will not lead to capacity addition. India's largest cigarette manufacturer, ITC, which has about three-fourths of market share in cigarettes and is the potential beneficiary from the ban, said it wouldn't comment on the matter. Nicotine addicts who have been dreaming of shifting to Camel or Salem from ITC's Wills or Gold Flake, may have to wait for eternity if the CCEA puts its stamp of approval on the plan. But the lobbying by global firms may not end as yet given that it may be billions of dollars of revenue lost for multinational companies. Read more...

-------------------------------------------------------------
Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Saturday, 20 February 2010
Issue- 889


#471 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:19 pm
Subject: SURVEY: What do you think of draft Community Systems Strengthening Framework?
bobbyramakant
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SURVEY: What do you think of draft Community Systems Strengthening Framework?
***************************************************************

[Mods note: To take the online survey on "What do you think of the draft
Community Systems Strengthening Framework?" go to:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/L65X6SC . To join the CSS eForum, send an email
to: join-cssframeworkconsult@... . Thanks]
****************************************************************

Dear members,

Online Survey – What do you think of the draft Community Systems Strengthening
Framework?

Click on the link now - http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/L65X6SC

* The online survey is available in English, French*, Spanish* and Russian* -
Please take no more than 10 minutes of your time to make sure that civil society
have their say in the Community Systems Strengthening (CSS) Framework.
* Take the survey now – click here http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/L65X6SC
* Survey closes 5 March 2010
* All survey respondents will be entered into a draw and the winner will receive
a digital camera (draw takes place on 15 March).

Don't forget, an online dialogue is also taking place on a CSS-dedicated eForum
– to join send a message to: join-cssframeworkconsult@...

Background
-----------
The CSS framework has been developed in recognition that there are gaps in
funding for many aspects of community action on HIV, TB, malaria, reproductive
health and other health-related issues. It has been developed specifically to
support the CSS component of Global Fund grants, but is applicable to all
community based activities aimed at improving health through community based
action. The Framework outlines the main elements – the building blocks – for
achieving effective community systems and provides illustrative examples of
potential activities and interventions that will help strengthen communities.

By feeding back on the draft framework, you will help ensure that the document
is clear, and that concerns central to your work are covered.

Opportunities for feedback:
- A 3-week online dialogue on a dedicated eForum
- An online survey available in English, French, Spanish and Russian
- Key informant interviews in a number of countries
- A two-day face-to-face consultation meeting to be held on 18-19 March

For more information visit: http://www.aidsalliance.org/Pagedetails.aspx?Id=405

* Available via  http://www.aidsalliance.org/Pagedetails.aspx?Id=405 shortly
-----------------

The online consultation on the draft CSS Framework is coordinated by the
International HIV/AIDS Alliance and International Council of AIDS Service
Organisations (ICASO) with support from the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and
Malaria (GFATM)


---------
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#472 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Wed Mar 3, 2010 12:08 pm
Subject: Community project to make homes free of tobacco smoke
rhlkaka
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Community project to make homes free of tobacco smoke
The Hindu, Tiruvananthapuram, Kerala

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
A community intervention programme to make households free of tobacco smoke, an initiative of the Quit Tobacco India project, is being launched here on Wednesday.

A project being carried out by the Achutha Menon Centre for Health Science Studies, public health wing of the Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, it is an attempt to encourage women to spearhead a change in the community by making their own households tobacco-smoke-free zones. Studies conducted in several parts of the world have shown that when households are declared tobacco-smoke-free zones, the men are persuaded to quit their smoking habit in phases because homes are no longer a convenient place to smoke. In the initial phase, the project will target households in the Parameswaram and Mandapakkunnu wards in the Nellanad panchayat in the Vamanapuram block of the district. The Achutha Memon centre is partnering with the Kerala Mahila Samakhya for this initiative, which will be inaugurated by Health Minister P.K. Sreemathy. Read more....

-----------------------------------------------------------
Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Wednesday, 03 March 2010
issue- 900


#473 From: tambakoo.kills@...
Date: Wed Mar 3, 2010 6:04 pm
Subject: 5th March is the deadline for Community Systems Strengthening (CSS) Survey
bobbyramakant
Send Email Send Email
 
5th March is the deadline for Community Systems Strengthening (CSS) Survey
*************************************************************

[Mods note: To take the CSS Survey before the deadline 5 March 2010, go to:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/L65X6SC . Thanks]
****************************************

ACTION ALERT REMINDER
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU
---------------------------------
Have your say on the Draft Community Systems Strengthening (CSS) Framework

PARTICIPATE IN THE ONLINE SURVEY!
Online at: http://www.icaso.org/publications/2010/FebruaryActionAlert.pdf

Online Survey "What do you think of the draft Community Systems Strengthening
Framework?" is available in English:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/L65X6SC

Survey closes 5 March 2010

All survey respondents will be entered into a draw and the winner will receive a
digital camera (draw takes place on 15 March).

Don't forget, an online dialogue is also taking place on a CSS-dedicated eForum
to join send a message to:
join-cssframeworkconsult@...

Background
---------
The CSS framework has been developed in recognition that there are gaps in
funding for many aspects of community action on HIV, TB, malaria, reproductive
health and other health-related issues. It has been developed specifically to
support the CSS component of Global Fund grants, but is applicable to all
community based activities aimed at improving health through community based
action. The Framework outlines the main elements the building blocks for
achieving effective community systems and provides illustrative examples of
potential activities and interventions that will help strengthen communities.

By feeding back on the draft framework, you will help ensure that the document
is clear, and that concerns central to your work are covered.

For more information visit:
http://www.aidsalliance.org/Pagedetails.aspx?Id=3D405

#474 From: Tambakoo.Kills@...
Date: Sat Mar 6, 2010 9:34 am
Subject: Cigarette ads can fuel teens' smoking desires
rhlkaka
Send Email Send Email
 

Cigarette ads can fuel teens' smoking desires
The Times of India, New Delhi, Delhi

[To read this news in Hindi language, click here]

EXCERPT:
A new study has revealed that the more teenagers see cigarette ads, the greater they are at risk of taking that first puff.

According to the study, the particular content of tobacco marketing resonates with youth and that the vivid imagery in tobacco advertising captures their interest, although teens typically are more resistant to the promotional seduction of other products. "Cigarettes have created a brand for every personality trait," study lead author Reiner Hanewinkel, PhD, director of the Institute for Therapy and Health Research in Kiel, Germany, said. "If you are looking to project independence and masculinity, think of the lonely cowboy in the Marlboro ads. On the other hand, if you're looking to project a desire for romantic relationships, and friendships are playing a role, then you will choose Lucky Strike if you are a man and Virginia Slims if you are a woman," Hanewinkel, who collaborated with Dartmouth Medical School, added.

Kids with high exposure to tobacco advertising were twice as likely to have tried smoking and three times as likely to have smoked in the past month, compared to those with low exposure. Exposure to tobacco advertising also was associated with higher intent to smoke in the future among the never-smokers, suggesting that it affects how adolescents perceive smoking even before they start. The study has relevance for the United States and other nations with partial advertising bans similar to Germany's restrictions.

The 2008 survey involved 3,415 German schoolchildren, ages 10 to 17, in rural and urban areas. Students saw images (with all the writing and brand logos removed) of six cigarette ads and eight commercial products such as clothing, cars, candy and detergent. With the brand information missing, researchers measured adolescents' ad recognition by applying psychological assumptions about attention and memory. They inquired about how frequently students had viewed each ad image and asked about smoking habits and intentions. Read more....

------------------------------------------------------
Tambakoo Kills News Bulletin
Saturday, 06 March 2010
issue-905


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