Urgent need for networks where people can seek help to quit tobacco: Dr VK Paul

Published On 2019-06-02 05:00 GMT   |   Update On 2019-06-02 05:00 GMT

Dr Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative to India, said the World No Tobacco Day presents a unique opportunity for all stakeholders to focus on multi-pronged strategies to combat tobacco use.New Delhi: There is an urgent need for developing a network of points where people can go and seek help to quit tobacco, Dr V K Paul, a member of NITI Ayog said recently.Addressing a National Consultation...

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Dr Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative to India, said the World No Tobacco Day presents a unique opportunity for all stakeholders to focus on multi-pronged strategies to combat tobacco use.


New Delhi: There is an urgent need for developing a network of points where people can go and seek help to quit tobacco, Dr V K Paul, a member of NITI Ayog said recently.


Addressing a National Consultation on 'Tobacco and Lung Health', organised by the health ministry to commemorate the World No Tobacco Day, Paul gave a clarion call for a mass agitation.


He said that ending the menace of tobacco use will require behavioural change.


Union health secretary Preeti Sudan highlighted the theme of the World No Tobacco Day 2019 -- the risks associated with tobacco use on people's lung health, from cancer to chronic respiratory disease.


Read Also:Union Health ministry asks states to penalise violation of tobacco rules


She stated that it is important to build a framework that is long term, effective and based on data and evidence.


"There is a need for community engagement and it's important that people and families learn how smoking affects the quality of life. She further said that without community engagement we cannot succeed," she stressed adding India has consciously taken up the crusade against tobacco.


The government has now interventions to address health conditions arising due to tobacco use, she added.


Dr Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative to India, said the World No Tobacco Day presents a unique opportunity for all stakeholders to focus on multi-pronged strategies to combat tobacco use.


"Tobacco control is everybody's responsibility. Governments, communities, families and individuals must join hands to stay united in the fight against tobacco by choosing health and saying no to all traditional and new forms of tobacco," he said.


The Health Ministry also felicitated Department of Medical, Health and Family Welfare, Government of Rajasthan and Professor Raj Kumar, Director of V P Chest Institute, the University of Delhi with 'World No Tobacco Day Award for 2019' for their exemplary accomplishments in the area of tobacco control.


At the event, the Health Ministry also released revised guidelines for Tobacco-Free Educational Institutions to provide fresh momentum to the implementation of tobacco control initiatives among adolescents and young adults.


A National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP) website was also launched. The website will house all the tobacco control related resource material at a single portal. This will cater to the ever-growing demand for resource material.


The ministry also released Operational Guidelines for National Tobacco Testing Laboratories. It has commissioned three National Tobacco Testing Laboratories (NTTL) which possess world-class facilities to analyse various kinds of tobacco products.


The guidelines provide the operational framework for the NTTL in India.


Earlier,  the Supreme Court refused to stay the operation of new amended rules of the Union Health Ministry directing the manufacturers to have graphic warning images on packets of cigarettes and other tobacco products and helpline numbers for those who wanted to quit the habit.


Read Also:Supreme Court refuses to stay Health Ministry rules on health warning for tobacco products


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