altGeneva, 1 December 2015. People living in poor countries are exposed to more intense and aggressive tobacco marketing than those living in affluent countries, according to a study published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization today.
The study is the first to compare levels of tobacco marketing statistically across a wide range of countries since 2005 when countries, signed up to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC), have been required to adopt strict tobacco control measures, including marketing bans.
Tobacco marketing , which drives the uptake of smoking especially among young people, is still thriving despite many countries’ efforts to ban it, the study shows.
The study highlights the major looming threat to people’s health in low-income countries if steps are not taken soon to rein in tobacco marketing.
“The tobacco industry uses marketing to drive the uptake of smoking among children and young people,” said one of the authors, Professor Anna Gilmore, director of the Tobacco Control Research Group at the University of Bath, the United Kingdom.
“Its sales are falling in high-income countries and so its future profitability depends on getting young people hooked on smoking in low-income countries. Our study reveals the extent of its effort to do this,” she said.
Studies show that the more adolescents are exposed to tobacco marketing, the more likely they will smoke as adults. In many countries the vast majority of adult smokers begin smoking before the age of 18. For example, 80% of smokers in the United States of America start before they are 18, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.
The sale of single cigarettes, for example, is an important way of attracting children who can’t afford to buy a whole packet of cigarettes. Gilmore and her colleagues found that in low-income countries 64.2% of selected stores sold single cigarettes compared with just 2.8% in high-income countries.
Between 2009 and 2012, the researchers recorded the number of tobacco advertisements and outlets selling tobacco products along a one- kilometre walk in 462 communities across 16 countries.
They also interviewed nearly 12 000 people asking them to recall whether they had seen tobacco marketing in different types of media, including on television, radio, posters, signage, online, in print or in the cinema, in the previous 6 months.
They found that tobacco advertising was at its most intense in the low-income countries studied (India, Pakistan and Zimbabwe), where they observed 81 times more tobacco advertisements per study community than in the high-income countries (Canada, Sweden and the United Arab Emirates). (India has since become a lower middle-income country, according to the World Bank’s classification.)
Similarly, for the communities studied the number of outlets selling tobacco was two and a half times greater in the low-income and lower middle-income countries (China, Colombia and Islamic Republic of Iran) than in the high-income countries covered by the 16-country study.
The researchers found that, overall, almost 10% of interviewees reported seeing tobacco marketing on at least five types of media in the previous six months and 45% reported seeing such marketing on at least one type of media.
“The study findings reflect that comprehensive bans of tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship are one of the tobacco control measures least adopted by countries, particularly low-income countries. Four times more high- and middle-income countries have adopted them than low-income countries,” said Dr Armando Peruga, programme manager of the tobacco free initiative at WHO.
Tobacco-related diseases are the single most important cause of preventable deaths in the world. It is projected that tobacco use will cause 8.4 million deaths by 2020, 70% of which will occur in developing countries, where about 900 million smokers live.
Unless the WHO FCTC obligations are promptly and fully implemented, these figures are expected to rise dramatically.
“There has been substantial progress in the past decade, but we must now recommit ourselves to our global tobacco control efforts so that everyone, all over the world is protected from the tobacco epidemic,” Peruga said.
The WHO FCTC was developed in response to the globalization of the tobacco epidemic. Since the WHO FCTC came into force in 2005, 180 countries have become parties to it. It is the most rapidly and widely embraced treaty in United Nations history, covering almost 90% of the world’s population.

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