| Literature DB >> 32411887 |
Marc C Willemsen1,2, Bethany Hipple Walters2, Daniel Kotz3, Linda Bauld4.
Abstract
European countries vary widely in the development and implementation of effective tobacco-control programs and policies. Why some countries lag behind others is inherently a political matter. National-level policymakers struggle between the need to protect public health and the need to recognize economic and ideological considerations. Within this context, use of scientific evidence plays an important role in the policy making process. Articles 20 and 22 of the World Health Organisation's Framework Convention of Tobacco Control (FCTC) oblige countries to develop and coordinate research on aspects of tobacco control and require of them to facilitate knowledge transfer and capacity building between countries. This paper considers various ways how EU and national policy makers may accomplish this. We conclude that progress in three areas is needed: 1) generation of more scientific evidence relevant for each country; 2) facilitation of policy learning between countries; and 3) building capacity and collaborations between researchers and tobacco-control advocates to bridge the gap from research to policy, especially in countries with weak tobacco-control infrastructures.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; WHO FCTC; capacity building; knowledge transfer; research capacity; tobacco control
Year: 2019 PMID: 32411887 PMCID: PMC7205141 DOI: 10.18332/tpc/110587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Prev Cessat ISSN: 2459-3087
The cornerstones of a comprehensive approach to tobacco control
Eliminate exposure to tobacco products via: smoke-free environments point-of-sale display bans reduction of number of tobacco sale outlets Provide comprehensive and affordable nation-wide smoking cessation support systems for those who want to quit smoking Implement continuous media campaigns to raise awareness of the harms from smoking and to promote quit attempts Make tobacco products less attractive through: regular and substantial increases of the consumer price of tobacco through tax increases advertising and promotion restrictions health warnings on cigarette packs and plain packaging regulating additives in tobacco products that contribute to attractiveness and addictiveness |
Key elements in the FCTC Article 20 on research and surveillance
| Parties to the treaty (i.e. governments) shall develop and promote national research in the field of tobacco control. |