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Smokefree Oceania From Vision to Reality Auckland, Sept 2007

Smokefree Oceania From Vision to Reality Auckland, Sept 2007. Colin Tukuitonga Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs. Outline. Tobacco use by Pacific Peoples Tobacco and health inequalities in NZ Smoking in the Pacific region Current/recent interventions From Vision to Reality

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Smokefree Oceania From Vision to Reality Auckland, Sept 2007

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  1. Smokefree OceaniaFrom Vision to RealityAuckland, Sept 2007 Colin Tukuitonga Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs

  2. Outline • Tobacco use by Pacific Peoples • Tobacco and health inequalities in NZ • Smoking in the Pacific region • Current/recent interventions • From Vision to Reality • NZ actions to support Pacific initiatives

  3. Key Messages • Tobacco use one of the largest preventable contributors to health inequalities in NZ; mainly CVD and cancer • Recent/current interventions in NZ largely ineffective? • Solution is better focus; research and resources, community ownership • NZ actions needed to assist PICs

  4. Tobacco Use in the Pacific Region • Improving information about tobacco use, WHO STEPS Surveys • Major public health challenge • Recent review showed all PIC male populations reported higher rates of smoking than NZ and Australia (except Palau) • Male smoking prevalence ranges 22-57%

  5. Tobacco Use in the Pacific Region • Nauru, Tokelau, French Polynesia, New Caledonia and Kiribati showed higher prevalence of smoking among women • Prevalence ranges from 1-51% in women • High prevalence of youth smoking in several PICs (3-68%); gaps in data • Potential for better exchange of experiences with NZ

  6. Smoking Prevalence by Ethnic Group and Gender, NZ 2006.

  7. Smoking Prevalence (%) by Ethnic Group and Gender; Alcohol & Drug Survey 2003

  8. Prevalence of Current Smoking (15-19 years) by Ethnic Group and Gender, 2006

  9. Exposure to Second-hand smoke • No change in Year 10 students reporting living in a home with at least one parent smoking (50% in 2001 and 49% in 2005) • Census 1996 showed 49.5% children under 15 years of age living in a household with at least one smoker • Socioeconomic gradient

  10. Maternal Smoking • PIF Study – 1365 mothers of 1398 infants born in Middlemore Hospital 2000 interviewed at 6 weeks • Approx. 25% smoked during pregnancy; ¾ continued smoking; little change during pregnancy Butler et al NZ Med J 2004 26;117

  11. Smoking Cessation • 3% of calls to Quitline 2001-2003; lower than expected • Half of all callers in 20-34 year age group; equal gender distribution • Significant improvement needed

  12. MOH Review of Evidence 2007 • Recent review of major population-level tobacco control interventions showed that we know little about what works for Pacific Peoples • E.g. impact of increasing unit price of tobacco unknown • Mass media campaigns possibly effective

  13. Inequalities in Health • 8% of deaths in women and 19% in men could be avoided if smoking was eliminated • “Smoking-related deaths and illnesses are the most easily preventable in Pacific communities” Cancer Society of NZ: Health Effects of Smoking 2003.

  14. Tracking Disparities 2007 • Lowest all-cause mortality rate decline in NZ (14% males, 10% females) between 1981-84 and 2001-04 • Much of the decline due to reduction in CVD incidence and case fatality rates (lowest among Pacific Peoples; 19% for males and 38% for females) • CVD explains about 1/3 mortality gap and ¼ cancer, especially among females

  15. Tobacco Use Among Pacific Peoples in Aotearoa/NZ has remained largely unchanged since 1996

  16. 1996 Census • 32% adults 15 years plus daily smokers; 35% males and 27% females • Tokelauans, Niueans and Cook Islanders highest prevalence and Fijians lowest prevalence of smoking

  17. Clearing the Smoke • 5-year tobacco control plan (2004-2009) • Objectives 1. Prevent initiation; high youth smoking 2. Promote cessation; 3% Quitline calls 3. Prevent harm from second-hand smoke; no change in Pacific households? 4. Improve monitoring, surveillance and evaluation 5. Improve infra-structure support and coordination

  18. National Drug Policy 2007-2012 • Government policy on tobacco, alcohol, illegal and other drugs in one framework • ‘Whole of Government’ approach • Better focus on Pacific Peoples • Reducing inequalities is a feature • Action Plans provision

  19. Drug Policy – Pacific Focus • Improve ethnicity data collection; ethnic-specific information • Improved treatment services

  20. From Vision to Reality Research, Resource, Re-group

  21. Strategy for Eliminating Tobacco Use among Pacific Peoples in NZ • Better focussed research • Resources to match burden • Ownership by Pacific communities • Delivery by Pacific providers • Learn from Maori experiences

  22. NZ Role in Curbing Tobacco Use in the Region • Continuing support for FCTC • Limits on trade - $5 million annual trade in tobacco with 12 small island states • Exclude tobacco from free trade agreements • Regional approach to limits on sponsorship and marketing tobacco products in the region

  23. Summary • Tobacco use is major preventable cause of premature death and illness among Pacific Peoples in Aotearoa • Recent and current efforts remain ineffective; bold actions are needed • Focused research on what works for Pacific Peoples urgently needed

  24. Summary • Make tobacco use unacceptable, unsociable in Pacific communities • Better service coordination • Resources to Pacific communities worth considering

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