The latest WHO estimates show that more than seven million people
worldwide including 8,100 Kenyans die every year from tobacco related
diseases. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- According to the World Health Organisation (WHO) the top three causes of death in 2016 globally were, coronary artery disease, stroke and chronic airways disease, all significantly associated with smoking of tobacco.
- The latest WHO estimates show that more than seven million people worldwide including 8,100 Kenyans die every year from tobacco related diseases.
- This figure includes around 900,000 deaths from exposure to second-hand smoke.
Tobacco smoking is a major risk factor for cardiovascular
disease, one of the leading causes of death not only in Kenya but
globally. Smoking raises the risk of developing many persistent health
problems, including atherosclerosis, a condition in which fatty deposits
build up inside arteries, thereby raising the risk of stroke and
coronary heart disease. The risk of heart disease in smokers is double
that of non-smokers.
According to the World Health
Organisation (WHO) the top three causes of death in 2016 globally were,
coronary artery disease, stroke and chronic airways disease, all
significantly associated with smoking of tobacco.
The
latest WHO estimates show that more than seven million people worldwide
including 8,100 Kenyans die every year from tobacco related diseases.
This figure includes around 900,000 deaths from exposure to second-hand
smoke.
For this year’s World No Tobacco Day themed
‘Tobacco and Heart Disease’, the WHO seeks to increase awareness on the
link between tobacco and cardiovascular diseases, including stroke,
calling for increased private and public participation in sensitising
the public on the dangers of smoking to avert related deaths.
Since its inception in 2012, the Smoking Cessation Clinic at Aga
Khan University Hospital has helped scores of tobacco addicts to quit
the habit and save themselves from smoking related diseases.
A
smoker becomes dependent on nicotine, which is one of the 4,000 odd
ingredients in a cigarette. When taken in small quantities, nicotine
acts on the brain serving to create a pleasant but transient excitement.
This feeling though, wears off quickly leading to the lighting of a
chain of cigarettes, leading to addiction.
The main
role of a smoking cessation clinic is to help tobacco addicts to quit
the habit completely and not relapse in future. Smoking is a difficult
habit to stop and there is good evidence that shows quitting rates are
substantially higher in those who seek help in a programme such as ours
compared to those who go it alone. Such a programme involves multiple
processes such as patient education and counselling, use of nicotine
replacement therapy and other medication, and joining support groups.
Besides
heart disease, smoking is responsible for other life shortening
diseases including cancers affecting the throat, mouth, nasal cavity,
oesophagus, stomach, pancreas, kidney, bladder, and cervix. Stroke and
impotence in men are other notable smoking related complications.
Even
though Kenya has made significant progress on tobacco control in recent
years, smoking continues to, not just claim many lives but also reduce
the productivity and physical independence of even more, with huge
resultant costs on the national economy.
Rolling out
smoking cessation clinics at the county level can greatly help people
quit smoking and ultimately relieve the government health spending on
treatment of smoking related diseases.
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