Eleven per cent of Kenyans smoke cigarettes as the number of
teenage smokers continues to rise at an alarming rate despite the
introduction of stricter tobacco use.
Director of Medical Services Jackson Kioko said 10 per cent of teenagers aged between 13 and 15 consume tobacco products.
“We’re
facing a catastrophe because we are experiencing a high burden of HIV
infections from this age group that is also using tobacco at a young
age,” he said.
Mr Kioko, who was speaking during the
World No Tobacco Day on Thursday, said teenage girls in Class Seven and
Form Two are turning to smoking.
Official data shows that 12 per cent of the teenage smokers are boys while 6.7 per cent are girls.
Shisha
smoking was the leading cause of tobacco consumption among the youth
and women in the country. But the data on Shisha was collected before
the ban on the commodity. Fewer people are smoking worldwide, especially
women, but only one country in eight is on track to meet a target of
reducing tobacco use significantly by 2025, the World Health
Organisation said Sunday.
Three million people die
prematurely due to tobacco use that causes cardiovascular diseases such
as heart attack and stroke, the world’s leading killers, the WHO said.
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