Mumbai: When it comes to pictorial warnings on tobacco packets, India ranks a low 123 among 198 countries surveyed on the warnings parameter.
While experts agree that pictorial warnings on tobacco packets is a proven strategy that deters people from smoking or chewing tobacco, the ground reality is that less than 40% of the display area on cigarette and tobacco packets is covered by the warnings in India. This finding was part of the 'Cigarette Package Health Warnings: International Status Report', released at a recent WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) conference. India ranks 123 among the countries surveyed on the size and fulfillment of requirements for picture- based warnings on packets.
Under the FCTC, an international treaty signed and ratified by India, the countries are required to carry health warnings on all packages of tobacco products describing the harmful effects of tobacco use. The warnings "should be 50% or more of the principal display areas, but shall be no less than 30% of the display areas", and include pictorial warnings.
Dr Pankaj Chaturvedi, oncologist at Tata Memorial Hospital who has been working against cigarette and tobacco products, said pictorial warnings serve as a deterrent to a first-time user. "The tobacco industry has exploited loopholes in the pictorial warning notifications to subvert the law. While smokeless tobacco packets have gory pictorial warnings of mouth cancer, the picture quality is so bad that they become meaningless. Moreover, the cigarette industry chooses the least graphic warning—photo of a lung—that has literally no impact on a user's mind."
International guidelines under the FCTC recommend that warnings should be as large as is achievable, should include a rotating series of graphic pictures and should be on both the front and back of packages. Examples of pictures that appear on packages include a diseased lung or mouth, a patient in a hospital bed and a child exposed to secondhand smoke.
However, the written warnings may not help much in compelling smokers to quit, say doctors. "Nearly 20-25% of Indian children are users of tobacco and nearly one-third users in India are illiterate," said Chaturvedi. "They cannot read the warning printed in Hindi or English. Pictorial warnings work better for them," he added.
"Considering that Australia has passed a law that mandates plain packaging of cigarettes packs to discourage branding, we still have a long way to go to get the message across to a user," said Surabhi Shastri of 'Smokefree Mumbai' campaign.
AT THE FAG END
Australia, ranked first in the report, now has the largest warnings in the world at 82.5% of the package front and back (75% front, 90% back) surpassing Uruguay, previous holder of the title
Australia has also implemented plain packaging
to prohibit tobacco company colours, logos and design elements on the brand part of the package, and to standardize the shape and format of the package
In India, only 40% of the tobacco and cigarette packets are covered with warnings. While tobacco packets have pictures of mouth cancer with low picture quality, cigarette packets continue to display a picture of lungs, which makes no impact on users
47 countries and territories have warnings covering at least 50% of the package front and back, up from 32 in 2010 and 24 in 2008
18 countries have warnings covering more than 50% of the package front and back
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