| Smoking 'costs the NHS billions' |
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BBC News 07.10.2008 Treating smokers costs the NHS in England £2.7bn a year, compared with £1.7bn a decade ago, a report claims. Anti-smoking group Ash says the cost would have risen to over £3bn had action to curb smoking not seen numbers fall from 12 million to nine million. The report's proposals to cut smoking include mandatory plain packaging. The government is consulting on next steps in tobacco control and regulation.Lobby group Forest argues that smokers pay over £9bn a year in tobacco tax. Future tobacco measures could include restricting the display of tobacco products in shops - putting cigarettes under the counter - and removing branding and logos from all tobacco packaging. Smokers' lobby groups and tobacco manufacturers are opposed to such measures, saying they are unnecessary, unreasonable and unjustified. It has been illegal for manufacturers to use trademarks, text or any sign to suggest that one tobacco product is less harmful than another since 2003. But recent research carried out at Nottingham University suggests that products bearing the word "smooth" or using lighter coloured branding mislead young people into thinking that these products are less harmful to their health. The research also reveals th Tougher laws Ash, the British Heart Foundation and Cancer Research UK would like a requirement that all tobacco products have plain packaging. They would also like the display of tobacco products in shops to be banned. Deborah Arnott, director of Ash, said: "The government could save thousands of lives and hundreds of millions from the NHS budget with an ambitious new tobacco control strategy. More than anything we need to protect young people from the aggressive marketing techniques employed by the tobacco industry." Jill Morrell of the British Lung Foundation said: "Two thirds of people with smoking-related lung disease tell us there should be a ban on cigarette vending machines in future and the same number say they want to see cigarettes removed from display in supermarkets." 'Unreasonable and unworkable' The Tobacco Manufacturers' Association is opposed to tobacco display bans which it says are not supported by robust evidence, will not achieve the stated public health benefit and will have serious unintended consequences. A spokeswoman said: "Tobacco product displays are not predictors of youth smoking. Articol in intregime: BBC News |










Treating smokers costs the NHS in England £2.7bn a year, compared with £1.7bn a decade ago, a report claims. Anti-smoking group Ash says the cost would have risen to over £3bn had action to curb smoking not seen numbers fall from 12 million to nine million. The report's proposals to cut smoking include mandatory plain packaging. The government is consulting on next steps in tobacco control and regulation.