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Press release

New GSTHR Briefing Paper analyses FCTC COP10 Agenda and meeting documents, identifying concerning implications for tobacco harm reduction

10 October 2023 – for immediate release

The 10th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) is taking place in late November in Panama. Decisions taken at these biennial meetings of nations that are signatories to the WHO FCTC (‘Parties’) influence how tobacco control policies are implemented at a national level.

A new Briefing Paper launched by the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR), a Knowledge·Action·Change project, provides an analysis of the meeting’s provisional Agenda and publicly available papers (as of late September 2023). Titled The FCTC COP10 Agenda and supporting documents: implications for the future of tobacco harm reduction, this new Briefing Paper, accessible in multiple languages, is in addition to the GSTHR’s earlier FCTC COP10 explainer addressing how the FCTC COP meeting works.

The GSTHR’s analysis indicates that at present, tobacco harm reduction and its potential to reduce smoking-related death and disease are entirely absent from the proceedings. This is in contradiction to the obligation under the FCTC itself to include harm reduction as one of the three pillars of tobacco control, alongside supply and demand reduction. There remain over a billion smokers globally, despite more than two decades of tobacco control measures enacted under the FCTC.

Previous GSTHR research has estimated that over 112 million people worldwide are already using safer nicotine products, including nicotine vapes, snus, nicotine pouches and heated tobacco products. Countries such as the UK, New Zealand, Sweden and Japan, all of which are Parties to the FCTC, have witnessed accelerating declines in smoking rates. Tobacco harm reduction is either part of these nations’ official response to smoking or has emerged through a large-scale consumer-led switch to safer products from smoking.

Yet the publicly available documentation ahead of the FCTC COP10 only presents safer nicotine products as a threat to tobacco control, rather than as potential tools to support a switch from smoking and reduce high-risk tobacco use. Parties to the FCTC are expected to be encouraged to classify and regulate nicotine vapes, snus, nicotine pouches and heated tobacco products in the same way as tobacco and combustible tobacco. This risks removing or reducing access to safer options from people who already use them and may return to smoking – and from people who smoke and have the potential to switch and improve their health.

Speaking on behalf of the GSTHR, Professor Gerry Stimson commented:

“Having observed the WHO’s activities on this issue for some time, many are unsurprised that the FCTC COP10 meeting papers reveal a concerning direction of travel. The WHO and FCTC Secretariat’s refusal to engage with evidence from multiple countries that have witnessed accelerated declines in smoking rates is unscientific and unjustifiable. Their repeated characterisation of safer nicotine products as a threat to tobacco control runs directly counter to what should be the overarching goals of the Convention – to reduce smoking-related deaths and disease as rapidly and effectively as possible.

“People who use safer nicotine products are barred and have no voice at the FCTC COP10. Those Parties who have successfully adopted and supported access to these products as effective tools for smoking cessation must ensure that their own progress is not hindered by COP decisions – and that the potential for tobacco harm reduction is given due consideration by all Parties present in Panama next month.”

ENDS

About us: Knowledge·Action·Change (K·A·C) promotes harm reduction as a key public health strategy grounded in human rights. The team has over forty years of experience of harm reduction work in drug use, HIV, smoking, sexual health, and prisons. K·A·C runs the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR) which maps the development of tobacco harm reduction and the use, availability and regulatory responses to safer nicotine products, as well as smoking prevalence and related mortality, in over 200 countries and regions around the world. For all publications and live data, visit https://gsthr.org.

Our funding: The GSTHR project is produced with the help of a grant from the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, an independent, US non profit 501(c)(3) which, under US law, must operate independently of its donors. The project and its outputs are, under the terms of the grant agreement, editorially independent of the Foundation.

Shell Ecigclick Photo
Michelle

My name is Michelle - I am 48 and an engineer and Technical Author by trade. I started vaping many years ago in the days of Tornado tanks, Ego batteries and Variable Voltage. My journey in vaping began again around 2016 and have been interested in the topic ever since. I finally stopped smoking as of June 2019 and that is all thanks to vaping! 20mg Nicotine Salts are my hero! Oh and I am partial to a nice pod mod and Bubblegum e-liquid! I have enjoyed writing for Ecigclick since 2017 and love being part of this great team! My passion for Tobacco Harm Reduction has also led me to becoming a Trustee for the NNA (New Nicotine Alliance) aiding in Advocacy

My name is Michelle - I am 48 and an engineer and Technical Author by trade. I started vaping many years ago in the days of Tornado tanks, Ego batteries and Variable Voltage. My journey in vaping began again around 2016 and have been interested in the topic ever since. I finally stopped smoking as of June 2019 and that is all thanks to vaping! 20mg Nicotine Salts are my hero! Oh and I am partial to a nice pod mod and Bubblegum e-liquid! I have enjoyed writing for Ecigclick since 2017 and love being part of this great team! My passion for Tobacco Harm Reduction has also led me to becoming a Trustee for the NNA (New Nicotine Alliance) aiding in Advocacy

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