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The Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health
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Tackling the tobacco challenge: achieving 'healthy public policy' in tobacco control in Guernsey

David Jeffs, MRCP, MFPHM, FAFPHM, FRSH

Director of Public Health States of Guernsey Board of Health

Alan Hodgkinson, MHSM, DipHSM, FIMgt, FRSH

Executive States of Guernsey Board of Health

Scientific evidence identifying smoking as the major cause of poor health and premature death in both industrialised and increasingly in developing countries is now overwhelming. Despite this, for a variety of reasons, there has been reluctance amongst many Governments including that of Britain, to take all logical action necessary to restrict and reduce smoking, especially amongst the young. The States of Guernsey in the Channel Islands has recently agreed to introduce an integrated package of measures designed specifically to make smoking less attractive and less accessible and less affordable to young people in an attempt to reduce the number of addicted adult smokers. These measures include a total ban of all public advertising of tobacco, apart from at point of sale, a substantial price rise followed by further price rises for a minimum period of five years, a raising of the minimum age for the purchase of tobacco from 16 to 18 years, an increase in the size and content of pack health warnings, and increased funding for specific non- smoking health promotion activities. The various barriers to achieving these reforms are described.

The Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health, Vol. 116, No. 6, 367-375 (1996)
DOI: 10.1177/146642409611600605


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