WHO Urges Smoking Ban in Public Places
Posted on: Tuesday, 29 May 2007, 18:00 CDT
By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER
GENEVA - The U.N. health agency on Tuesday issued its strongest policy recommendations yet for controlling tobacco use, urging all countries to ban smoking at indoor workplaces and in public buildings.
"The evidence is clear. There is no safe level of exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke," said Dr. Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization.
Tobacco use is the world's leading cause of preventable death, accounting for 10 percent of adult fatalities, according to WHO. It is responsible for 5.4 million deaths each year, a figure that is expected to rise to 8.3 million by 2030, the agency says.
Increasing numbers of nonsmokers will also die unless governments take action, WHO said in its 50-page report. It said governments of both rich and poor countries should declare all public indoor places smoke-free, by passing laws and actively enforcing measures to ensure that "everyone has a right to breathe clean air, free from tobacco smoke."
At least 200,000 workers die each year because of exposure to smoke at their offices and factories, according to the U.N. labor agency. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that about 3,000 deaths from lung cancer each year occur among nonsmoking Americans.
"This is not about shaming the smoker. This is not even about banning smoking," said Dr. Armando Peruga, who heads WHO's anti-tobacco campaign. "This is about society taking decisions about where to smoke and where not to smoke."
He cited Ireland and Uruguay as governments that have successfully tackled smoking by creating and enforcing smoke-free environments. Legislation of the kind has proved popular among both smokers and nonsmokers, according to WHO, whose policy recommendations set broad goals for its 193 member states but are not legally binding.
Almost half the world's children - some 700 million - are exposed to air polluted by tobacco smoke, particularly at home, WHO says. The agency made its recommendations on the basis of new reports by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the U.S. surgeon general and the California Environmental Protection Agency.
WHO said in 2005 that it had stopped hiring smokers, as part of what it termed its "public lead" in the fight against tobacco.
Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Related Articles
- Statewide Anti-Smoking Campaign Takes New Approach in Curbing Teen Smoking
- Launch of New Public Relations Agency, VoxPop Public Relations, LLC; Shannon Troughton Named 40 Under 40 by PR Week
- New Tobacco Research Finds Minnesota's Latino Population Smoking Significantly Less than General Population
- Sunshine Week - Public Records Free Directory
- Disney Online to Offer Public Libraries Free Access to Playhouse Disney Preschool Time Online(TM); Quality, Ad-Free Educational Programming Emphasizes Kindergarten Readiness Through Online Learning
- Beaumont, Texas, Council Votes to Prohibit Smoking in Enclosed Public Spaces
- Survival of Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Due to Biomass Smoke and Tobacco
- Adolescents who watch smoking in movies are more likely to try smoking
- Imperial Chief Hits Out Over Government's Smoking Policy
- Smoke Out: Tobacco Linked to 63 Percent of Cancer Death Burden Among African-American Men
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds