| Literature DB >> 34032890 |
Jasper V Been1,2,3, Anthony A Laverty4, Aikaterini Tsampi5, Filippos T Filippidis4.
Abstract
Children have the right to grow up free from the hazards associated with tobacco smoking. Tobacco smoke exposure can have detrimental effects on children's health and development, from before birth and beyond. As a result of effective tobacco control policies, European smoking rates are steadily decreasing among adults, as is the proportion of adolescents taking up smoking. Substantial variation however exists between countries, both in terms of smoking rates and regarding implementation, comprehensiveness and enforcement of policies to address smoking and second-hand smoke exposure. This is important because comprehensive tobacco control policies such as smoke-free legislation and tobacco taxation have extensively been shown to carry clear health benefits for both adults and children. Additional policies such as increasing the legal age to buy tobacco, reducing the number of outlets selling tobacco, banning tobacco display and advertising at the point-of-sale, and introducing plain packaging for tobacco products can help reduce smoking initiation by youth. At societal level, health professionals can play an important role in advocating for stronger policy measures, whereas they also clearly have a duty to address smoking and tobacco smoke exposure at the patient level. This includes providing cessation advise and referring to effective cessation services.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Europe; Smoke-free policy; Smoking; Smoking cessation; Tobacco
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34032890 PMCID: PMC8589739 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-021-04116-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Fig. 1Trends in current smoking among men (A) and women (B) according to age in European Union. Data from Eurobarometer surveys waves 72.3 (2009), 77.1 (2012), 82.4 (2014), 87.1 (2017) and 93.2 (2020)
MPOWER policies recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO)
| Acronym | Group of tobacco control policies | Highest WHO-recommended level |
|---|---|---|
| M | Monitoring tobacco use and prevention policies | Recent, representative and periodic data for both adults and youth |
| P | Protect people from tobacco smoke | All public places completely smoke-free |
| O | Offer help to quit tobacco use | National quit line, and both nicotine replacement therapy and some cessation services (cost-covered) |
| W | Warn about the dangers of tobacco | Large warning labels on tobacco packaging with all appropriate characteristics (W1); national anti-tobacco campaign with at least seven appropriate characteristicsa including airing on television and/or radio (W2) |
| E | Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship | Ban on all forms of direct and indirect advertising of tobacco. |
| R | Raise taxes on tobacco | ≥ 75% of tobacco retail price is tax. |
aThe WHO outlines eight characteristics for successful mass media campaigns [14]
Fig. 2Percentage of European countries covered in 2008 and 2018 by each of the MPOWER policies at the highest level as recommended by the World Health Organization. M monitoring tobacco use and prevention policies, P protect people from tobacco smoke (i.e. smoke-free legislation), O offer help to quit tobacco use (i.e. access to and reimbursement of cessation services), W warn about the dangers of tobacco (e.g. pack warnings (W1); media campaigns (W2)), E enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, R raise taxes on tobacco
Overview of pertinent children’s rights/interests and their indicative implications for tobacco control
| Children’s rights and interests relevant to tobacco control | Indicative implications |
|---|---|
| Best interest of the child (Articles 3 CRC; 24 EU Charter) | Ensure that children’s best interests are consistently implemented in every tobacco-related action taken; ensure the child such protection and care as is necessary for his or her well-being by protecting it from tobacco |
| Health (Articles 24 CRC; 11 ESC; 35 EU Charter; the ECHR does not contain such a right but see Articles 2, 3, 8 ECHR and Article 2 Protocol no 1 to the ECHR) | Take appropriate measures to reduce the use of tobacco among children; prevent exposure to smoking; provide advisory and educational facilities for the promotion of health and education in schools on prevention of smoking; restrict the supply of tobacco through controls on production, distribution, advertising and pricing; ban the sale of tobacco to young persons; create smoke-free spaces; ban tobacco advertising |
| Life [survival and development] (Articles 6 CRC; 2 ECHR; 2 EU Charter) | As above |
| Information (Articles 17 CRC; 11 EU Charter) | Provide appropriate information to protect children against the harmful effects of tobacco |
| Government support for parental responsibility to protect best interest of the child (Article 18 CRC) | Support parents to avoid exposing children to environmental tobacco smoke |
| Protection against physical and moral dangers (Articles 19 CRC; 7.10 ESC) | Protection against the spread of smoking |
| Adequate standard of living (Article 27 CRC)/Respect for private and family life (Articles 8 ECHR; 7 EU Charter) | Ensure children are not exposed to tobacco smoke inside their homes |
| Protection against exploitation (Article 36 CRC) | Protect children against tobacco marketing |
CRC United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child [58], EU European Union, ESC Council of Europe European Social Charter [59], ECHR European Convention on Human Rights [65]