Trends in 2022 showed a continued decline in tobacco use rates globally. With about one in five adults worldwide consuming tobacco compared to one in three in 2000.
The report shows that 150 countries are successfully reducing tobacco use. Brazil and the Netherlands are seeing success after implementing MPOWER tobacco control measures, with Brazil making a relative reduction of 35 per cent since 2010 and the Netherlands on the verge of reaching the 30 per cent target.
Ruediger Krech, director of the WHO department of health promotion, said, “Good progress has been made in tobacco control in recent years, but there is no time for complacency. I’m astounded at the depths the tobacco industry will go to pursue profits at the expense of countless lives. We see that the minute a government thinks they have won the fight against tobacco the tobacco industry seizes the opportunity to manipulate health policies and sell their deadly products."
WHO urges countries to continue putting in place tobacco control policies and continue to fight against tobacco industry interference.
Currently, the WHO South-East Asian Region has the highest percentage of the population using tobacco at 26.5 per cent, with the European Region not far behind at 25.3 per cent. The report shows that by 2030, the WHO European Region is projected to have the highest rates globally, with a prevalence of just over 23 per cent. Tobacco use rates among women in WHO’s European region are more than double the global average and are reducing much slower than in all other regions.
While the numbers have steadily decreased over the years, the world will make it to a 25 per cent relative reduction in tobacco use by 2025, missing the voluntary global goal of 30 per cent reduction from the 2010 baseline. Only 56 countries globally will reach this goal, down four countries since the last report in 2021.
The prevalence of tobacco use has changed little since 2010 in some countries, while six countries are still seeing tobacco use rising: Congo, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Oman, and the Republic of Moldova.
WHO urges countries to accelerate efforts for tobacco control as there is still much work to be done. The Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index 2023, published by STOP and the Global Centre for Good Governance in Tobacco Control, shows that efforts to protect health policy from increased tobacco industry interference have deteriorated worldwide.
Country surveys consistently show that children aged 13–15 years in most countries are using tobacco and nicotine products. To protect future generations and ensure that tobacco use continues to decline, WHO says it will dedicate 2024’s World No Tobacco Day to protecting children from tobacco industry interference.