The Federal Ministry of Health has
declared that about 4.5 million Nigerians consume, on an annual basis,
20 billion sticks of cigarettes, making smoking a major public health
issue in Nigeria.
In May, the World Health Organisation (WHO)
reported that tobacco kills more than seven million people each year,
six million of them from direct use and the others due to exposure to
smoking. The report said countries like Nigeria accounted for 80 per cent morbidity and mortality – a heavy strain on an already weak and fragile health system.
Prof. Isaac Adewole,the Minister of Health, highlighted the danger we face at a sensitisation workshop on the implementation of the National Tobacco Control Act 2015.
According to Nigeria’s adult tobacco survey, some 4.1 million men and
500,000 women smoke in Nigeria, while 6.4 million adults were exposed to
smokers. “We have to fight this looming epidemic now,” said Adewole
while pledging that the tobacco act will be implemented to prohibit
smoking for persons below 18 years of age.
Tobacco has
immediate adverse health consequences upon addiction, including
accelerating the development of chronic health disease across full life
course. The relationship between active smoking and both reduced lung
function and impaired lung growth is also linked to a strong tobacco
habit. Therefore, Nigeria needs to focus on protecting young people from
starting to smoke.
The out of place branding of tobacco together with food and beverages
at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) must be addressed, with the
removal of tobacco from all such categorisation. Education policies,
tools and programmes that highlight the dangers in initiating the habit
need to be developed and implemented. An increase in expenditure on
sustained and comprehensive tobacco control programmes have proved
effective in the reduction of youth and adult smoking rates in many
countries. Our governments, at all levels, need to lend its financial
support to these initiatives.
Studies showed that 80 per cent of adult smokers began smoking before
the age of 18 years.
Adolescents, in particular, have been found to be
distinctively susceptible to social and environmental influences. The
tobacco industry invests heavily in research on how best to capture the
imagination of youth; assured in the knowledge that nicotine (a heavily
addictive drug found in cigarettes) would continue to ensure that the
target group would persist in smoking into adulthood. Studies have also
confirmed that the younger the age, the heavier the addiction and thus
the harder it is to drop the habit. The calculation, which has proved
true, is that most of these young people never consider the long term
risks.
The use of tobacco has to be curtailed, else our young people will
continue to get sick, efficiency will continue to decline and our nation
will continue to lose many of its otherwise productive citizens. We
must avail our young people the true perspective on smoking; we must aim
at creating the environment that makes it difficult for smoking to
thrive. We urgently need to prevent the needless suffering of premature
disease caused by tobacco, the huge expenditure on health, as well as
commit to save millions of lives.
The authorities should please implement the National Tobacco Control Act.
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