Dr KK Aggarwal
The following quotes
demonstrate an increasing global recognition for tobacco harm reduction.
“We (in 2007) suggested that
making effective, affordable, socially acceptable, low-hazard nicotine products
available to smokers as a market alternative to tobacco could generate
significant health gains, by allowing smokers to stop smoking tobacco, without
having to stop using the nicotine to which they are addicted. As most of the
harm caused by smoking arises not from nicotine but from other components of
tobacco smoke, the health and life expectancy of today’s smokers could be
radically improved by encouraging as many as possible to switch to a smoke-free
source of nicotine.” Royal College of Physicians, Nicotine without
smoke, 2016.
“We will help people quit
smoking by permitting innovative technologies that minimise the risk of harm.
We will maximise the availability of safer alternatives to smoking.” UK
Department of Health, Towards a smoke-free generation, 2017.
“The BMA’s ambition to achieve
a tobacco-free society, leading to substantially reduced mortality from
tobacco-related disease. Given that e-cigarettes are now the most popular
device used in attempts to quit smoking, and that many people have used them to
successfully quit tobacco use, they have significant potential to support this
ambition, and help reduce tobacco-related harm.” British
Medical Association, E-cigarettes: balancing risks and opportunities, 2017
“These individuals (who cannot
quit smoking) should be encouraged to switch to the least harmful form of
tobacco product possible; switching to the exclusive use of e-cigarettes is
preferable to continuing to smoke combustible products.” American
Cancer Institute, Position statement on e-cigarettes, 2018
“If long term smokers who have
been unable to quit smoking tobacco cigarettes switch to e-cigarettes,
thousands of lives could be saved.” Trent Zimmerman MP,
Chair of the Australian parliamentary committee report into the use and
marketing of electronic cigarettes and personal vaporisers in Australia, 2018.
“If the great majority of
tobacco smokers who are unable or unwilling to quit would switch without delay
to using an alternative source of nicotine with lower health risks, and
eventually stop using it, this would represent a significant contemporary
public health achievement.” WHO, Electronic nicotine delivery systems
and electronic non-nicotine delivery systems, 2016.
“Tobacco control’ means a
range of supply, demand and harm reduction strategies that aim to improve the
health of a population by eliminating of reducing their consumption of tobacco
products and exposures to tobacco smoke.” WHO, Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control, 2003
(Source: No Fire, No Smoke
Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction, 2018 (2018). London:
Knowledge-Action-Change)
Dr KK Aggarwal
Padma Shri
Awardee
President Elect Confederation of
Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania
(CMAAO)
Group
Editor-in-Chief IJCP Publications
President Heart
Care Foundation of India
Past National President
IMA
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