Hiking taxes on tobacco could save 230,000 babies from dying every year across the world, study finds
- Increasing tobacco tax could have prevented 230,000 infant fatalities in 2018
- This equates to 5.8% of the 4million deaths among under-ones logged that year
- Increasing tobacco tax is best way to bring this number down, researchers said
Raising the tax on tobacco could prevent more than 200,000 infant deaths every year, a study suggests.
Smoking kills more than 8million people around the world annually.
A higher tax on cigarettes would deter people from smoking, reducing levels of toxic chemicals expectant mothers and babies are exposed to, Imperial College London researchers said.
The UK has one of the steepest cigarette taxes in the world, which has remained above 75 per cent since 1992 and triggered a 51 per cent drop in cigarette sales.
But the UK is outlier, charging £12.55 for a packet of 20 cigarettes, compared to other countries where it can cost less than £1.
The academics analysed 4million fatalities among children younger than one and cigarette taxes in more than 150 countries.
The findings suggest every 10 per cent increase in cigarette tax is linked with around a two per cent drop in fatalities among babies aged one and younger.
They estimated that 230,000 baby deaths could have been prevented in 2018 2018 if a 75 per cent tax rate recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) was imposed on tobacco products worldwide.
Almost all of the fatalities would have been prevented in low income nations.
Imperial College London researchers analysed deaths among infants younger than one (red bars) and younger than one month old (blue bars). If all countries implemented a 75 per cent tax on cigarettes, the World Health Organization’s recommended level, there would be 231,220 fewer infant deaths around the world, including 181,970 fewer newborn deaths. The researchers said 99.2 per cent of these deaths, or 229,495, would have been prevented in low and middle-income countries (LMICs), while there would have been 1,725 fewer in high-income countries (HICs)
Pregnant women who smoke or are exposed to second-hand smoke are more at risk of having a misscarriage, giving birth early and experiencing stillbirth. And babies who breathe in second-hand smoke are at a higher risk of chest infections, meningitis and death
Pregnant women who smoke or are exposed to second-hand smoke are more at risk of having a misscarriage, giving birth early and experiencing stillbirth.
And babies who breathe in second-hand smoke are at a higher risk of chest infections, meningitis and death.
Increasing the tax on tobacco products has been shown to be ‘the most effective measure’ to reduce tobacco use and the health problems linked with smoking, the researchers said.
The team said: ‘We know that tobacco smoking continues to kill more than 8million people per year, and that increasing taxes on tobacco is an effective way to bring this number down.
WHAT ARE THE HEALTH RISKS OF SMOKING FOR CHILDREN?
Babies and children are some of the most vulnerable to secondhand smoke.
Youngsters exposed to passive smoke are at a higher risk of chest infections, meningitis and a persistent cough.
Smoking during pregnancy also puts unborn babies at risk.
It increases the risk of miscarriage, premature birth, a low birth rate and stillbirth.
‘This study highlights that if everywhere taxed tobacco at the levels recommended by the WHO, we would substantially reduce neonatal and infant deaths.’
Researchers examined data on newborn deaths — those that occur within 28 days of birth — and infant deaths, which include those within the first year of birth, as well as the tax placed on tobacco across 159 countries between 2008 and 2018.
Overall, there was an average of 14.4 newborn deaths and 24.9 infant deaths in each country per 1,000 live births.
But the rates were five times higher in the poorest nations compared to the wealthiest.
Countries with the highest smoking rates include Myanmar, Chile and Lebanon, where more than half of adults smoke.
Low and middle-income countries recorded 19 newborn and 33 under-one fatalities per 1,000 live births.
Meanwhile, high-income countries logged four newborn and 6 under-one deaths per 1,000 live births.
The data also shows only 11 per cent of the poorest countries follow the WHO recommendation of 75 per cent tax on tobacco, compared to 42 per cent of the wealthiest nations.
The findings, published in the scientific journal PLOS Global Public Health, suggest each 10 per cent increase in cigarette tax is linked with a 2.6 per cent drop in newborn deaths and a 1.9 per cent drop in infant mortality.
If all countries implemented a 75 per cent tax on cigarettes in 2018, this would have cut infant deaths by 231,220, including 181,970 fewer newborn deaths.
The researchers said 99.2 per cent of these deaths, or 229,495, would have been prevented in low and middle-income countries, while there would have been 1,725 fewer in high-income countries.
Implementing recommended levels of taxation in the poorest nations ‘should be a priority since this is where the lowest levels of taxation and the largest potential infant mortality benefits exist’, the researchers said.
This would be triggered by a drop in cigarette consumption due to the increased cost, which would reduce the amount of second-hand smoke expectant mothers were exposed to, as well as reducing smoking during pregnancy.
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