CONFERENCE PROCEEDING
From Kazimierz to Athens - three decades of tobacco control advancement in Europe: time to tobacco-caused diseases endgame
 
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Health Promotion Foundation, Nadarzyn, Poland
 
 
Submission date: 2017-04-05
 
 
Acceptance date: 2017-04-06
 
 
Publication date: 2017-05-25
 
 
Corresponding author
Witold A. Zatoński   

Health Promotion Foundation, Nadarzyn, Poland, ul. mszczonowska 51, 05-830 Nadarzyn, Poland
 
 
Tob. Prev. Cessation 2017;3(May Supplement):113
 
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ABSTRACT
In the early 1990s the premature mortality of young and middle-aged adults in many countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) reached some of the highest levels in the world. It was not only twice higher than in the countries of Western Europe, but also above the rates of many developing countries, including China and India. The main cause underlying this health catastrophe in CEE were tobacco-caused diseases. In November 1990, almost precisely a year after the collapse of the Berlin Wall, a summit of tobacco control leaders took place in the town of Kazimierz in Poland. The aim of the meeting was to devise a strategy and plan of action that would allow to counteract the tobacco epidemic ravaging the post-communist states. The Kazimierz conference gathered leading tobacco control experts from across Europe and North America. Almost thirty years on from the Kazimierz Declaration, most of its health goals have been fully accomplished. The gap in smoking between young adults in CEE and Western Europe is almost closed, as evidenced by converging lung cancer morbidity and mortality rates. However, tobacco control in Europe is far from being finished business. There is an urgent need to formulate a new plan, akin to the Kazimierz Declaration in the early 1990s, that would allow tobacco control in Europe to take another leap forward. We need a Declaration of Athens that outlines the vision of civil society movement for tobacco end game, and the ENSP is best placed to launch such an initiative.
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