Are
sedation clinics the answer to tobacco addiction?
As tobacco is the cause of
40 percent of cancer cases in India, experts say banning it alone won't help.
What is desired, they feel, is for the government to open more sedation clinics
and begin education about the ill-effects of tobacco at the school level as
children have started taking to smoking early these days.
"The government has
been doing the awareness bit, but there is a need of setting more tobacco
sedation clinics that can assist the people in getting rid of addiction to
smoking and the use of tobacco-related products," Pawan Gupta, head of
department, surgical oncology, Asian Institute of Medical Sciences, told us.
Gupta, who has written a
book, "Win over Tobacco Made Easy", also wants the government to hold
de-addiction workshops that can be a crucial for creating awareness.
It has been observed that
tobacco - mainly in the form of gutka, beetle nut (paan), zarda and areca nuts
- is the main cause of 80 to 90 percent of mouth cancer cases in India.
According to a report
"Challenges to Effective Cancer Control in China, India and Russia - The
Lancet Oncology"( April 2014) around two-fifths (40 percent) of all
cancers in India are attributed to tobacco use, and the economic cost of
illness and premature death due to tobacco consumption exceeds the combined
government and state spend on medical and public health, water supply and
sanitation.
"In urban areas
smoking is fashionable, while in tier II and tier III cities tobacco-related
products are consumed. So there have to be more de-addiction camps at the
grassroot level," Manish Singhal, consultant, medical oncology, at Fortis
Hospital, told us.
Adding fuel to this
growing malady is that schoolchildren take to smoking at an early age. This
includes a growing number of young girls and women joining this dangerous
bandwagon.
"School children take
to smoking when they are just 9-10 years old; so it becomes important to bring
awareness at the school level and conduct workshops and seminars on it,"
Menu Walia, director, medical oncology, Max Super Specialty Hospital, told us.
On its part, the
government is leaving no stone unturned to make the public aware of the gory
effects of using tobacco-related products on health, the lungs and the mouth.
This is through posters displayed at public places and short-videos screened before
movies in cinema halls.
Then, the warning -
"Tobacco Kills" or "Smoking is Injurious to Health" - runs
at the bottom of the screen every time an actor smokes in a film.
"Children very easily
get influenced on what is shown on television and in films. They get impressed
when their favorite stars smoke, so banning on-screen smoking will help and go
a long way," said Walia.
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