| 04 Juin 2018
31  May 2018 ¦ Geneva: Tobacco use has declined markedly since 2000,  according to a new World Health Organization (WHO) report, but the  reduction is insufficient to meet globally agreed targets aimed at  protecting people from death and suffering from cardiovascular and other  non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
 
 For World No Tobacco Day 2018, WHO has joined with the World Heart  Federation to highlight the link between tobacco and cardiovascular  diseases (CVD) - the world’s leading causes of death, responsible for  44% of all NCD deaths, or 17.9 million deaths annually.
 
 Tobacco use and second-hand smoke exposure are major causes of  cardiovascular diseases, including heart attacks and stroke,  contributing to approximately 3 million deaths per year. But evidence  reveals a serious lack of knowledge of the multiple health risks  associated with tobacco.
 
 “Most people know that using tobacco causes cancer and lung disease, but  many people aren’t aware that tobacco also causes heart disease and  stroke – the world’s leading killers,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom  Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “This World No Tobacco Day, WHO is  drawing attention to the fact that tobacco doesn’t just cause cancer, it  quite literally breaks hearts.”
 
 While many people are aware tobacco use increases the risk of cancer,  there are alarming gaps in knowledge of the cardiovascular risks of  tobacco use. In many countries, this low awareness is substantial; for  example, in China, over 60% of the population is unaware smoking can  cause heart attacks, according to the Global Adult Tobacco Survey. In  India and Indonesia, more than half of adults do not know smoking can  cause stroke.
 
 “Governments have the power in their hands to protect their citizens  from suffering needlessly from heart disease,” says Dr Douglas Bettcher,  WHO Director for the Prevention of NCDs. “Measures that reduce the  risks to heart health posed by tobacco include making all indoor public  and workplaces completely smoke-free and promoting use of tobacco  package warnings that demonstrate the health risks of tobacco.”
 
 World off track to meet tobacco reduction target
 Tobacco kills over 7 million people each year, despite the steady reduction in tobacco use globally, as shown in WHO’s new Global Report on Trends in Prevalence of Tobacco Smoking 2000-2025. The report shows that worldwide, 27% smoked tobacco in 2000, compared to 20% in 2016.
 
 However, the pace of action in reducing tobacco demand and related death  and disease is lagging behind global and national commitments to reduce tobacco use by 30% by 2025 among people aged 15 and older. If the  trend continues on the current trajectory, the world will only achieve a  22% reduction by 2025.
 
 Other main findings from the new report include:
 
 
- Change in smoking: There are 1.1 billion adult smokers in the world today, and at least 367 million smokeless tobacco users. The number of smokers in the world has barely changed this century: it was also 1.1 billion in 2000. This is due to population growth, even as prevalence rates decline.
 - By sex: For males aged 15 and over, 43% smoked tobacco in 2000 compared to 34% in 2015. For females, 11% smoked in 2000, compared to 6% in 2015.
 - Smokeless tobacco: around 6.5% of the global population aged 15 and over use smokeless tobacco (8.4% of males and 4.6% of females).
 - Country response: Over half of all WHO Member States have reduced demand for tobacco, and almost one in eight are likely to meet the 30% reduction target by 2025. But countries must do more to monitor tobacco use in all its forms – not only tobacco smoking. Currently, one in four countries have insufficient data to monitor their tobacco epidemic.
 - Youth: Worldwide, about 7%, or just over 24 million children aged 13–15, smoke cigarettes (17 million boys and 7 million girls). About 4% of children aged 13–15 years (13 million) use smokeless tobacco products.
 - Developing countries: Over 80% of tobacco smokers live in low- and middle-income countries (LMICS). Prevalence of smoking is decreasing more slowly in LMICs than in high-income countries, and the number of smokers is on the increase in low-income countries.
 
 
 Dr Svetlana Axelrod, WHO’s Assistant Director-General for NCDs and  mental health, says: “We know what policies and actions can increase  tobacco quit rates, prevent people from starting using tobacco, and  reduce demand. We must overcome obstacles to implementing measures like  taxation, marketing bans and implementing plain packaging. Our best  chance of success is through global unity and strong multisectoral  action against the tobacco industry.”
 
 Editors’ note:
 Countries have committed to reducing premature death from NCDs by  one-third by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals, as well  as implementing the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO  FCTC).
 The WHO FCTC entered into force in February 2005 and has today 181 Parties covering more than 90% of the world's population.









