Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tobacco Is The Second Major Cause Of Death In The World

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tobacco Is The Second Major Cause Of Death In The World

    TOBACCO IS THE SECOND MAJOR CAUSE OF DEATH IN THE WORLD

    ArmRadio.am
    31.05.2007 15:57

    Today, on the World No Tobacco Day, the World Health Organization
    and the Ministry of Health held a press conference under the slogan
    "Smoke-free inside."

    The press conference aimed to draw public's attention to the tobacco
    use related problems, to present the main WHO related messages of the
    Day, and to raise awareness on the lethal health and economic costs
    linked to second-hand smokers.

    UN Resident Coordinator Ms. Consuelo Vidal in her opening remarks
    mentioned: "There is no doubt: breathing second-hand tobacco smoke
    (SHS) is very dangerous to our health. It causes cancer, as well as
    many serious respiratory and cardiovascular diseases in children and
    adults, often leading to premature death. There is no safe level of
    human exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke, and only 100% smoke-free
    environments can adequately protect from dangers of second-hand smoke."

    Amongst the event participants were representatives of the local
    and international NGOs, which were most active in tobacco control
    campaigns, representatives of the municipality of Yerevan and various
    health professional organizations. Certificates of the Ministry of
    Health were granted to acknowledge their contribution to the tobacco
    control in Armenia this year.

    Tobacco is the second major cause of death in the world. Every year it
    kills more than accidents, suicides, murders, AIDS and use of illegal
    drugs all together. It is well known that half the people who smoke
    regularly today - about 650 million people - will eventually be killed
    by tobacco. Equally alarming is the fact that hundreds of thousands
    of people who have never smoked die each year from diseases caused
    by breathing second-hand tobacco smoke.

    Second-hand smoking causes cancer, as well as many serious respiratory
    and cardiovascular diseases in children and adults, often leading to
    premature death.

    The evidence is clear: there is no safe level of exposure to
    second-hand tobacco smoke. Hence the World Health Organization (WHO)
    signaled the urgent need for countries to make all indoor public
    places and workplaces 100% smoke-free with the release of its new
    policy recommendations on protection from exposure to second-hand
    tobacco smoke in advance of World No Tobacco Day, which focuses this
    year on this theme.
Working...
X