Geneva -
The World Health Organization (WHO)
today urged governments to protect
the world’s 1.8 billion young people
by imposing a ban on all tobacco
advertising, promotion and
sponsorship. The WHO call to action
comes in advance of World No Tobacco
Day, 31 May. This year’s campaign
focuses on the multi-billion dollar
efforts of tobacco companies to
attract young people to its
addictive products through
sophisticated marketing.
Recent
studies prove that the more young
people are exposed to tobacco
advertising, the more likely they
are to start smoking. Despite this,
only 5% of the world’s population is
covered by comprehensive bans on
tobacco advertising, promotion and
sponsorship. Tobacco companies,
meanwhile, continue targeting young
people by falsely associating use of
tobacco products with qualities such
as glamour, energy and sex appeal.
“In
order to survive, the tobacco
industry needs to replace those who
quit or die with new young
consumers,” said WHO
Director-General, Margaret Chan. "It
does this by creating a complex
‘tobacco marketing net’ that
ensnares millions of young people
worldwide, with potentially
devastating health consequences."
“A ban
on all tobacco advertising,
promotion and sponsorship is a
powerful tool we can use to protect
the world’s youth,” the
Director-General added.
Since most people start smoking
before the age of 18, and almost a
quarter of those before the age of
10, tobacco companies market their
products wherever youth can be
easily accessed – in the movies, on
the Internet, in fashion magazines
and at music and sports venues. In a
WHO world wide school-based study of
13-15 year-olds, more than 55% of
students reported seeing
advertisements for cigarettes on
billboards in the previous month,
while 20% owned an item with a
cigarette brand logo on it.
But it
is the developing world, home to
more than 80% of the world’s youth,
which is most aggressively targeted
by tobacco companies. Young women
and girls are particularly at risk,
with tobacco companies seeking to
weaken cultural opposition to their
products in countries where women
have traditionally not used tobacco.
“The tobacco industry employs
predatory marketing strategies to
get young people hooked to their
addictive drug,” said Dr Douglas
Bettcher, Director of WHO’s Tobacco
Free Initiative. "But comprehensive
advertising bans do work, reducing
tobacco consumption by up to 16% in
countries that have already taken
this legislative step."
"Half
measures are not enough," added Dr
Bettcher. "When one form of
advertising is banned, the tobacco
industry simply shifts its vast
resources to another channel. We
urge governments to impose a
complete ban to break the tobacco
marketing net," he said.