Tobacco use continues to be a primary contributor to the global burden of disease, causing an estimated 12% of deaths worldwide among people aged 30 and over. Four leading cardiovascular organisations - American Heart Association, American College of Cardiology, European Society of Cardiology and World Heart Federation – today released a joint opinion calling for greater action at the global scale to end the tobacco epidemic once and for all.
The organisations are urging governments to take immediate action to implement the World Health Organization's MPOWER framework, which outlines six essential policy approaches proven to reduce tobacco use: Monitor tobacco use and prevention policies; Protect people from tobacco smoke; Offer help to quit tobacco use; Warn about the dangers of tobacco; Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and Raise taxes on tobacco.
The joint opinion outlines comprehensive tobacco prevention strategies that are necessary to fully implement the MPOWER framework, including:
• Lowering the nicotine concentrations in all combustible tobacco products.
• Further research to understand the health impacts of nicotine on the cardiovascular system and the long-term effects of electronic cigarettes.
• Enforcement of strong systems and premarket assessments of all tobacco products.
• Strong regulation of tobacco industry marketing to ensure false health claims are not made about products that have not been thoroughly researched and authorized through regulatory review.
• Greater global action to remove all non-tobacco flavored products from the market.
• Raising the price of all tobacco products, through excise taxes and other means.
• Youth-targeted counter-marketing campaigns to effectively reduce tobacco use among youth.
• Access to comprehensive, evidence-based cessation services as a safer alternative for adults who wish to quit smoking combustible cigarettes.
Despite global reductions in tobacco use, the growing popularity of electronic cigarettes and other newer tobacco products that appeal to youth with flavorings threatens progress toward ending tobacco use and nicotine addiction – the "tobacco endgame." Countries must effectively regulate electronic cigarettes and other emerging tobacco products to protect young people and improve public health worldwide.
The joint opinion is being published simultaneously in the flagship journals of all four organisations: the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), the Journal of the American Heart Association (JAHA), the European Heart Journal (EHJ) and Global Heart.
Professor Stephan Achenbach, President of the European Society of Cardiology stated: "Today the ESC joins other leading professional organisations in cardiovascular healthcare to send a strong, global message calling for public health campaigns and legislation to fight tobacco and, in particular, to deter vaping. There is increasing evidence on the adverse effects of e-cigarettes. New measures are needed to stop marketing campaigns for e-cigarettes and flavored tobacco, especially those targeting young people."
Organizational Quotes:
"We are proud to join with our global public health colleagues to call for swift action to end tobacco use and nicotine addiction worldwide," said Mitchell S. V. Elkind, M.D., MS, FAAN, FAHA, president of the American Heart Association. "The evidence-based strategies that have been successfully implemented in countries around the world, from government regulation to tobacco taxes to funding for prevention and cessation programs, would make an enormous difference if implemented on a global scale. The time is now to redouble our efforts to reach the tobacco endgame by ending tobacco use and nicotine addiction worldwide."
"Nicotine can cause serious health risks to the cardiovascular system at all stages of life," said Athena Poppas, MD, MACC, immediate past president of the American College of Cardiology. "Nicotine may increase a person's blood pressure, heart rate and flow of blood to the heart, narrow the arteries and harden the arterial walls, which in turn can lead to a heart attack. Nicotine also impacts brain development and poses dangers to youth, pregnant women and the developing fetus. There needs to be a greater understanding of the impacts of nicotine on cardiovascular health and nicotine delivery products on children and youth to inform further treatment and regulatory approaches to nicotine."
"Tobacco use is the single greatest preventable cause of death in the world today, with the majority of deaths occurring in low- and middle-income countries as a result of aggressive marketing campaigns by the tobacco industry in these regions," said Professor Fausto Pinto, President of the World Heart Federation . "The World Heart Federation is fully committed to fighting the global epidemic of tobacco consumption and tobacco addiction, and we encourage governments to accelerate implementation of the World Health Organization Framework Convention for Tobacco Control and the MPOWER package. Most importantly, governments must take steps to increase taxes on tobacco and nicotine products – the single most effective measure to reduce the consumption of these deadly products."