Make Smoking Cessation Central to Tobacco Control Strategy

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Despite ongoing tobacco control efforts, Pakistan faces high tobacco use and low cessation rates. Establishing accessible cessation services is crucial for public health.

Implementing supportive interventions, training healthcare providers, and involving communities can significantly improve quit rates and reduce tobacco-related diseases.

اردو خلاصہ

پاکستان میں تمباکو نوشی کے خاتمے کے لئے اقدامات کی ضرورت ہے۔ صحت کے نظام میں مدد اور کمیونٹی کی شمولیت اہم ہے تاکہ لوگوں کو quitting میں مدد ملے۔

یہ اقدامات صحت کے شعبے اور پالیسی سازوں کے لئے ضروری ہیں تاکہ تمباکو سے متعلق بیماریوں کو کم کیا جا سکے۔

English Key Points

  • Pakistan has a high prevalence of tobacco use with over 31 million users.
  • Smoking cessation support is lacking in the healthcare system.
  • Only a small percentage of smokers attempt to quit annually.
  • Effective cessation methods include counseling and pharmacological aids.
  • Integration of cessation services into primary healthcare is essential.
  • Community involvement can enhance tobacco control efforts.
  • Pakistan needs a national strategy for tobacco cessation.

اہم اردو نکات

  • پاکستان میں تمباکو کے استعمال کی شرح زیادہ ہے۔
  • صحت کے نظام میں مدد فراہم کرنے کے اقدامات کم ہیں۔
  • صرف کچھ لوگ quitting کی کوشش کرتے ہیں۔
  • مشورہ اور دوا سے quitting ممکن ہے۔
  • پہلی سطح پر صحت کی خدمات میں مدد شامل ہونی چاہئے۔
  • کمیونٹی کی شمولیت اہم ہے۔
  • پاکستان کو ایک مکمل حکمت عملی کی ضرورت ہے۔

Why This Matters

Addressing tobacco addiction through cessation support is vital for reducing health burdens and saving lives in Pakistan. It is a public health priority that requires immediate action.

Public Health Relevance

Enhancing tobacco cessation services can significantly decrease tobacco-related diseases and deaths, improving overall public health outcomes in Pakistan.

Policy Relevance

Developing and implementing a national tobacco cessation strategy is crucial for effective tobacco control and health policy in Pakistan.

About This Explainer

This is an easy-to-understand explainer based on the available article information, highlighting the importance of integrating smoking cessation into Pakistan's tobacco control efforts to improve public health outcomes.

Full Article Detail

Despite decades of tobacco control campaigns, graphic warnings, bans on advertising, and tax hikes, Pakistan remains trapped in a cycle of tobacco dependency. Over 31 million Pakistanis use tobacco in some form, and smoking-related illnesses claim over 160,000 lives annually. However, the smoking cessation remains ignored and almost forgotten, leaving the adult smokers who want to quit without any assistance. 

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Pakistan’s healthcare system lacks adequate smoking cessation support, resulting in low quit rates. If people decide to give up smoking, they do not know where they should seek assistance. That is why only 25% of smokers attempt to quit annually, with a success rate of less than 3%. 

Smoking cessation is not just a public health ideal—it's the most immediate and cost-effective way to reduce tobacco-related harm. Unlike preventive campaigns that target future smokers, cessation directly addresses the millions already addicted. Studies show that even brief counseling interventions can significantly increase quit rates, while pharmacological aids like Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT) and varenicline multiply the odds of success.

In countries like the UK, Australia, and Thailand, cessation services are integrated into primary healthcare, supported by national quitlines, subsidized medications, and public awareness campaigns. Pakistan, however, has yet to institutionalize cessation as a core component of its tobacco control strategy.

Despite ratifying the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in 2004, Pakistan has made little headway in implementing Article 14, which calls for accessible cessation services. The reasons are manifold. Tobacco control efforts have focused heavily on taxation and packaging, with cessation relegated to the margins. Most doctors receive no formal training in tobacco cessation, and cessation clinics are virtually nonexistent. The widespread misconception that nicotine directly causes diseases like cancer and heart disease complicates advice given to patients about smoking cessation services. Moreover, most smokers are unaware that quitting is possible with support—and that help even exists. Pakistan also lacks a toll-free quitline, a basic infrastructure in most countries with serious cessation programs.

To reverse the tide, Pakistan needs a national cessation strategy anchored in evidence and empathy, one that involves listening to smokers and making them part of efforts for a smoke-free future. Their participation in cessation efforts at the policy level will provide a critical link for understanding what help they need to quit. There is a need to establish a national quitline with trained counselors and multilingual support. A quitline was established in 2017 but it is no longer working. Similarly, smoking cessation should be integrated into primary healthcare. This integration should be backed by training for doctors and nurses. In a country like Pakistan, cessation medications should be subsidized. Unless the cessation medications are affordable and accessible, poor adult smokers will not use them.

In the past, tobacco control campaigns were launched regularly. Surprisingly, when social media platforms have become a source of instant contact, no tobacco control campaigns have been planned and launched. There is a desperate need to normalize quitting for adult smokers.  

Another critical aspect missing is the involvement of the communities. Smoking is perceived as an individual problem. However, to address this problem, collective efforts are a must. When communities get together, they are able to see smoking as everyone’s problem and make collective efforts to address it.
 
Pakistan’s tobacco control narrative must evolve-from punitive measures to supportive interventions. Cessation is not a luxury; it’s a public health imperative. Until Pakistan invests in helping smokers quit, the cycle of addiction, disease, and death will persist. The question is no longer whether Pakistan can afford to prioritize cessation. It’s whether it can afford not to.

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