WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control: Difference between revisions

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===Overview ===
=Overview=
The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is the first treaty negotiated under the auspices of the World Health Organization. The WHO FCTC is an evidence-based treaty that reaffirms the right of all people to the highest standard of health. The WHO FCTC represents a paradigm shift in developing a regulatory strategy to address addictive substances; in contrast to previous drug control treaties, the WHO FCTC asserts the importance of demand reduction strategies as well as supply issues.
The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is the first treaty negotiated under the auspices of the World Health Organization. The WHO FCTC is an evidence-based treaty that reaffirms the right of all people to the highest standard of health. The WHO FCTC represents a paradigm shift in developing a regulatory strategy to address addictive substances; in contrast to previous drug control treaties, the WHO FCTC asserts the importance of demand reduction strategies as well as supply issues.


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• Non-price measures to reduce the demand for tobacco, namely:  
• Non-price measures to reduce the demand for tobacco, namely:  


*Protection from exposure to tobacco smoke;
* Protection from exposure to tobacco smoke;
*Regulation of the contents of tobacco products;
*Regulation of the contents of tobacco products;
*Regulation of tobacco product disclosures;
*Regulation of tobacco product disclosures;
*Packaging and labelling of tobacco products;
*Packaging and labelling of tobacco products;
*Education, communication, training and public awareness;
*Education, communication, training and public awareness;
* Tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and,
*Tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and,
*Demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation.
*Demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation.


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===== Options for WHO FCTC involvement in ENDS to be positive for global public health =====
=====Options for WHO FCTC involvement in ENDS to be positive for global public health=====
The FCTC would best serve public health by doing some or all of the following:
The FCTC would best serve public health by doing some or all of the following:


* '''Recognise the opportunity, not just a threat'''. FCTC needs language that gives due weight to the reality that ENDS are beneficial and displacing high-risk products with low risk. It would be helpful to see at least equal weight given to the opportunities as to the threats.  In fact, more weight should be given to the opportunities given what we know from the evidence, summarised admirably by the Royal College of Physicians: ''Nicotine without Smoke: tobacco harm reduction, April 2016'' and Public Health England: ''E-cigarettes – and evidence update, August 2015''. WHO should be at least as concerned with squandering a tangible opportunity as avoiding a hypothetical risk.
*'''Recognise the opportunity, not just a threat'''.  
* '''Call for more research and of higher quality'''. FCTC should encourage and facilitate research with interdisciplinary and international collaboration as necessary, taking a balanced approach to assessing risk and benefits. It could do more to set down standards for research, like recognising that ‘dose makes the poison’ in toxicology studies, that confounding, reverse causality and selection bias pervade studies of e-cigarette use, that cell and animal studies have limited applicability, that an effect on the cardiovascular system is not evidence of harm etc.  WHO could commission a guide to ENDS research methods, that would help researchers avoid some of the more embarrassing mistakes they have made so far.
*'''Call for more research and of higher quality'''.  
* '''Make more of TobReg for scientific assessment'''. FCTC and WHO should make better use of TobReg to do scientific assessments and constitute this group with more diverse expertise. This would make the process of scientific assessment more transparent, open to challenge and accountable. The quality of the current WHO ENDS paper is so poor (see UKCTAS commentary) and so obviously laden with bias, that it does FCTC parties a real disservice.  This failure suggests that a different, more open, commissioning model would be advisable – rather than looking for consultants to provide a pre-ordained answer.  This is where a rejuvenated TobReg might be the answer.
*'''Make more of TobReg for scientific assessment'''.  
* '''Refashion the surveillance system to reflect changes in the nicotine market.''' Bring coherence to tobacco and ENDS surveillance (measuring prevalence etc), including coverage in WHO’s main surveys (GATS and GYTS), the FCTC surveillance regime and the NCD monitoring framework.  Convergence in definitions and survey questions would help with comparative analysis. Surveillance should anticipate developments such as heated tobacco products, novel tobacco and nicotine products and, generally, an expanding portfolio of non-combustible nicotine options. Much could be learnt from England’s Smoking Toolkit Survey – currently the most advanced, highest resolution survey of its type. Article 20 of the FCTC (Research, surveillance and exchange of information) provides the basis for the Parties co-ordinating in the way suggested.
*'''Refashion the surveillance system to reflect changes in the nicotine market.'''  
* '''Track and summarise the evolving policy environment'''. Regular ENDS policy scans would be valuable and should be done under Article 21 of the FCTC (Reporting and exchange of information) by parties individually, but it could be done to a consistent standard with ENDS policies extracted and aggregated into an annual thematic report. This could build on the initiative at John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in January 2016 [Country Laws Regulating E-cigarettes] – or it could be done by a different centre or as a commercial contract.
*'''Track and summarise the evolving policy environment'''.  
* '''Promote high quality regulation and standard-setting by Parties'''. If there are decisions or statements from COP-7, it would be helpful for WHO to stress that principles and disciplines of good regulation should underpin ENDS policy – as with all public health policy. These principles and disciplines include ‘proportionality’ and ‘non-discrimination’ backed by consultation and impact assessment, including assessment of the unintended consequences of intervention as well consequences of non-intervention.
*'''Promote high quality regulation and standard-setting by Parties'''.  
* '''Focus on the relationship between the state and citizen'''. FCTC should go back to public health basics. In modern public health, the role of governments as enabling and empowering citizens to make informed choices in their own interests (e.g.  WHO’s Ottawa Charter “''Health promotion is the process of enabling people to increase control over, and to improve, their health''“). Such principles run counter to, for example, state-imposed prohibitions on ENDS – which for inexplicable reasons ban much-safer vaping products while the much more harmful cigarettes remain pervasively available. It also suggests that meaningful consumer-friendly risk communication is essential – otherwise, how do people exercise informed choice?
*'''Focus on the relationship between the state and citizen'''.  
* '''Improve the tone and be more inclusive'''. Much communication and rhetoric coming from FCTC meetings feels contemptuous towards those it is notionally trying to help. It would be helpful to stress inclusiveness, consultation and respect for the idea of “''nothing about us, without us''” in health policy [which has been adopted in the NHS]. There has been too little empathy and humility towards smokers and vapers, but a different approach has been taken with other UN initiative (e.g. HIV/AIDS) and English Stop Smoking Services and Public Health England are doing much to address this in the nicotine field. The collaborative SOVAPE model in France suggests is a rising phenomenon. COP-7 could examine why its rules for observers exclude so many entirely legitimate stakeholders – e.g. consumers or smokers, the supposed beneficiaries of WHO policies, and the thousands of small businesses providing what amounts to a new consumer health technologies.
*'''Improve the tone and be more inclusive'''.  
* '''Reframe the UN/WHA non-communicable disease targets.''' The 2025 NCD targets to reduce cancer, heart disease, COPD and other major diseases are virtually impossible to meet. However, the FCTC could do more to shape a more credible response. Target 1 on NCD outcomes (25% reduction in NCD mortality between 2010 and 2025) is unlikely to be reached, but it is a laudable goal to pursue vigorously. Target 5 on tobacco prevalence (30% relative reduction in tobacco prevalence by 2025) requires a global annualised decline in prevalence between 2010 and 2025 that is ''three times'' (2.35%) the actual annualised decline between 2006 and 2012 (0.8%) [1]. The only plausible game-changer in sight is a tobacco harm reduction approach that replaces high-risk nicotine use with low-risk use. Ideally, an FCTC-led process would examine the strategies for meeting Target 5 (or reducing the scale of failure). This could include a refinement of the target definition to focus on ''smoking'', thus bringing the Target 5 ''risk factor'' objective into better alignment with the Target 1 ''health outcome.''  
*'''Reframe the UN/WHA non-communicable disease targets.'''  


[1]   Ng M, Freeman MK, Fleming TD, et al. Smoking prevalence and cigarette consumption in 187 countries, 1980-2012. Jama 2014; 311:183–92. [link] see Supplemental content – table 13 [PDF]
*'''Reshape the FCTC to recognise the range of risk within tobacco products.'''  
*'''Understand and play to WHO and FCTC strengths (and avoid its weaknesses).'''


* '''Reshape the FCTC to recognise the range of risk within tobacco products.'''  It is a major policy error to treat all tobacco products as if they are equally risky, when the range of risk may be 100-fold, and smokers can benefit by switching to lower risk alternatives. Much of the argument above about ENDS also applies to any proposals to regulate non-combustible tobacco products – smokeless tobacco, heated tobacco products, lozenges (etc) or other novel nicotine products.  All of which could (and in the case of snus, already does) play a significant role in reducing the disease burden arising from smoking. A major step could be taken in the FCTC by differentiating tobacco products according to risk of harm – the purpose of FCTC being to reduce harm – and so allowing for harm reduction to be included properly in tobacco control.  To take an obvious example, there is no case for taxing heated tobacco products, smokeless tobacco and novel non-combustible tobacco products at anything like the same level as cigarettes.
*'''Let FCTC Parties learn from ENDS and other harm reduction policies before bringing into the FCTC'''.  
* '''Understand and play to WHO and FCTC strengths (and avoid its weaknesses).''' The FCTC is good at taking well-established policies and helping to generalise these to all countries, establishing global norms and promoting solidarity. As long as these policies are evidence-based, effective in meeting the right goals, and applied in a way that appropriate for modern democracies and consistent with national law, then this is a highly worthwhile function.
*'''Focus on obligation to ‘do no harm’ and the dangers of unintended consequences.'''
 
But WHO should be aware of its limitations too …
 
* '''Let FCTC Parties learn from ENDS and other harm reduction policies before bringing into the FCTC'''. On the other hand, the FCTC is not a good forum for assessing the merits of new ideas, adopting innovation, trying novel regulatory approaches – this should be left to Parties to try a variety of options, evaluate, adjust and press ahead or reverse as appropriate.  That degree of flexibility is much harder to develop in an international convention, where decisions, once taken, are difficult to reverse however bad they turn out to be (note the Europe Union’s snus ban). FCTC should therefore avoid doing anything prescriptive on ENDS (WHO’s science is robustly contested), heated tobacco products (only now emerging), or reduced-nicotine cigarettes (experimental phase with very mixed results). The policy and science for these technologies should rest with Parties until a consensus is emerging about how such products should regulated and what sort of risk communications should be used.  For example, there has been positive developments on standard setting in France (AFNOR Devices and Liquids – 2015) UK (BSI PAS, 2015) these processes are ongoing, promising and need to continue.
* '''Focus on obligation to ‘do no harm’ and the dangers of unintended consequences.''' Until WHO and the parties to the FCTC have extensive practical experience to draw up, there is a danger that interventions could increase smoking, protect the cigarette trade and cause more disease and death – which we must all agree would be a terrible outcome from a tobacco control convention.  For example, any move to classify ENDS as tobacco products would be likely to have exactly that effect through applying excessive regulation designed for products with far greater risk.  The Royal College of Physicians, explains as follows: <blockquote>A risk-averse, precautionary approach to e-cigarette regulation can be proposed as a means of minimising the risk of avoidable harm, eg exposure to toxins in e-cigarette vapour, renormalisation, gateway progression to smoking, or other real or potential risks. However, if this approach also makes e-cigarettes less easily accessible, less palatable or acceptable, more expensive, less consumer friendly or pharmacologically less effective, or inhibits innovation and development of new and improved products, then it causes harm by perpetuating smoking. Getting this balance right is difficult. (Section 12.10 page 187, Nicotine without smoke: tobacco harm reduction)</blockquote>
 
If only everyone involved in the FCTC just remembered this one quote from RCP, and acted accordingly, then WHO and FCTC would: a) tread very lightly on tobacco harm reduction; b) be and be seen to be a more credible regulatory forum.
 
Comments, suggestions, disagreements etc… welcome in the comments.

Revision as of 16:42, 6 December 2020

Overview

The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is the first treaty negotiated under the auspices of the World Health Organization. The WHO FCTC is an evidence-based treaty that reaffirms the right of all people to the highest standard of health. The WHO FCTC represents a paradigm shift in developing a regulatory strategy to address addictive substances; in contrast to previous drug control treaties, the WHO FCTC asserts the importance of demand reduction strategies as well as supply issues.

The WHO FCTC was developed in response to the globalization of the tobacco epidemic. The spread of the tobacco epidemic is facilitated through a variety of complex factors with cross-border effects, including trade liberalization and direct foreign investment. Other factors such as global marketing, transnational tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, and the international movement of contraband and counterfeit cigarettes have also contributed to the explosive increase in tobacco use.

The core demand reduction provisions in the WHO FCTC are contained in articles 6-14:

• Price and tax measures to reduce the demand for tobacco, and

• Non-price measures to reduce the demand for tobacco, namely:

  • Protection from exposure to tobacco smoke;
  • Regulation of the contents of tobacco products;
  • Regulation of tobacco product disclosures;
  • Packaging and labelling of tobacco products;
  • Education, communication, training and public awareness;
  • Tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and,
  • Demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation.

The core supply reduction provisions in the WHO FCTC are contained in articles 15-17:

  • Illicit trade in tobacco products;
  • Sales to and by minors; and,
  • Provision of support for economically viable alternative activities.

The WHO FCTC opened for signature on 16 June to 22 June 2003 in Geneva, and thereafter at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, the Depositary of the treaty, from 30 June 2003 to 29 June 2004. The treaty, which is now closed for signature, has 168 Signatories, including the European Community, which makes it one of the most widely embraced treaties in UN history. Member States that have signed the Convention indicate that they will strive in good faith to ratify, accept, or approve it, and show political commitment not to undermine the objectives set out in it. Countries wishing to become a Party, but that did not sign the Convention by 29 June 2004, may do so by means of accession, which is a one-step process equivalent to ratification.

The Convention entered into force on 27 February 2005 - 90 days after it had been acceded to, ratified, accepted, or approved by 40 States.


Options for WHO FCTC involvement in ENDS to be positive for global public health

The FCTC would best serve public health by doing some or all of the following:

  • Recognise the opportunity, not just a threat.
  • Call for more research and of higher quality.
  • Make more of TobReg for scientific assessment.
  • Refashion the surveillance system to reflect changes in the nicotine market.
  • Track and summarise the evolving policy environment.
  • Promote high quality regulation and standard-setting by Parties.
  • Focus on the relationship between the state and citizen.
  • Improve the tone and be more inclusive.
  • Reframe the UN/WHA non-communicable disease targets.
  • Reshape the FCTC to recognise the range of risk within tobacco products.  
  • Understand and play to WHO and FCTC strengths (and avoid its weaknesses).
  • Let FCTC Parties learn from ENDS and other harm reduction policies before bringing into the FCTC.
  • Focus on obligation to ‘do no harm’ and the dangers of unintended consequences.