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Legislatures Urged to Adopt Sweden Method to make Kenya a Free Smoking Country

Apr 6, 2023
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Public health experts have urged Kenyan lawmakers to adopt the pioneering example set by Sweden, to encourage Kenyans to quit smoking.


Based on current trends, Sweden is set to become the first country in the world to achieve ‘smoke-free’ status when its tobacco smoking prevalence rate falls below 5% in the next few months.

This is the level below which a nation is considered smoke-free by the World Health Organization (WHO) an international research seminar in Stockholm last month heard that the Swedes have achieved this historic milestone by developing a specific policy formula towards
alternative nicotine products, such as vapes and oral nicotine pouches, as less harmful
alternatives to traditional cigarettes.


Speaking at a media briefing in Nairobi today, Dr. Michael Kariuki, Consultant pediatrician, epidemiologist, and researcher said:


“Sweden has made these tobacco harm reduction products as accessible, acceptable, and affordable as possible to adult smokers. By doing so, they have effectively wiped- out smoking in a country where, 50 years ago, 49% of men were smoking regularly,” he said.

“If Kenya can follow Sweden’s example and facilitate adult smokers’ transition to less harmful alternatives, it could save thousands of lives in our country.”


The success of the ‘Swedish Model’ is highlighted in the report The Swedish Experience: A roadmap for a smoke-free society. Compared to the rest of the European Union, Sweden has 44% fewer tobacco-related deaths, a cancer rate that is 41% lower, and 38%
fewer deaths attributable to any cancer.

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If every other country in the EU followed Sweden’s example in its approach to tobacco harm reduction, up to 3.5 million early deaths in Europe alone would be prevented in just one decade, the report states.


Commenting on Kenya’s situation, Dr. Nick Mutisya, a Consultant pediatrician and
the researcher said:


“Here in Kenya, we are on course to miss our Health Ministry’s target of 9.7% smoking prevalence by 2025. Smoking rates remain high despite strict regulatory restrictions, which include the prohibition of smoking in public places and mandatory health warnings on product packaging.


“Like the Swedes, our policymakers must appreciate that moving away from smoking is immensely difficult, and we need to provide smokers with an escape route.

“The Government is blocking that escape route by classifying vapes and pouches as tobacco products and subjecting them to high taxes and marketing restrictions that apply to the far more harmful traditional cigarettes.


“To beat smoking like Sweden, we urge our politicians to support harm reduction strategies and make smoke-free alternatives more affordable than cigarettes. Similarly, health professionals and smokers should be educated in the science involved, so that they can make informed choices.


“Kenya can – and should – benefit from Sweden’s successful switch to smoke-free status. Our policymakers need to apply the same evidence-based solutions that have already started to save millions of lives elsewhere.”

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