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  Metros   Delhi  19 Aug 2018  Health official gets WHO award for tobacco curbs

Health official gets WHO award for tobacco curbs

THE ASIAN AGE.
Published : Aug 19, 2018, 1:55 am IST
Updated : Aug 19, 2018, 1:55 am IST

The current gutkha users have also significantly reduced by 63 per cent as compared to the rest of India average figures of just 17 per cent.

Delhi government’s additional director of health S.K. Arora has been awarded with the prestigious WHO World No Tobacco Day 2017 Award for his extraordinary contribution towards tobacco control.
 Delhi government’s additional director of health S.K. Arora has been awarded with the prestigious WHO World No Tobacco Day 2017 Award for his extraordinary contribution towards tobacco control.

New Delhi: Delhi government’s additional director of health S.K. Arora has been awarded with the prestigious WHO World No Tobacco Day 2017 Award for his extraordinary contribution towards tobacco control.

He was presented the award by Henk Bekedam, WHO India country head, at a gathering on August 16. Dr Arora said that the tobacco prevalence in Delhi has come down by 6.5 per cent in the past six years, which is more than the rest of India average figures.

The National Health Policy 2017 of the government of India has set targets of relative reduction in tobacco prevalence by 15 per cent by 2020 and 30 per cent by 2025. “Delhi has already achieved these targets before 2017,” Dr Arora added. Accordi-ng to Global Adult Toba-cco Survey-2 (GATS 2, 2016-17), the prevalence of tobacco use has reduced by 27 per cent in Delhi as compared to 17 per cent  for the rest of India average. Similarly, current tobacco smokers in Delhi have reduced by 35 per cent as compared to 23 per cent for the rest of India average.

The current gutkha users have also significantly reduced by 63 per cent as compared to the rest of India average figures of just 17 per cent. For cessation modalities also, Delhi has performed much better than the rest of India average figures.

The Delhi government’s health department has been fighting against direct advertisement of brand promotion of tobacco and surrogate advertisement of tobaccos in the name of pan masala and other edibles such as tea, ilaichi (cardamom) for the past four years.

“I have written to CBSE and NCERT for last few years to create a chapter in schools curriculum to tackle the menace of tobacco in the country,” Dr Arora said.

Tags: delhi government, national health policy, who award