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‘Quit Like Sweden’ Launched

International health experts have rallied behind a major new global effort to replicate Sweden’s success at eradicating smoking by embracing a comprehensive approach that could prevent many millions of premature deaths worldwide

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International health experts have rallied behind a major new global effort to replicate Sweden’s success at eradicating smoking by embracing a comprehensive approach that could prevent many millions of premature deaths worldwide. Quit Like Sweden (QLS), launched at a conference in Brasilia featuring medical professionals, politicians and policymakers, will motivate and support countries worldwide to emulate the triumph of Sweden, which is set to become the first nation to attain official ‘smoke-free’ status later this year.

QLS founder Suely Castro, a Brazil-born harm reduction advocate, said: “Sweden has achieved this remarkable feat by ensuring that safer alternatives to smoking are accessible, acceptable and affordable.

“A country where 49% of men used to smoke regularly has virtually wiped out this scourge by allowing its smokers to switch to products that pose just a fraction of the risks, such as snus [traditional smokeless tobacco] and other smoke-free alternatives like vapes and nicotine pouches.

“Swedes are reaping the health dividend with significantly lower cancer cases and mortality rates compared to their European counterparts. Now Quit Like Sweden will amplify this message globally, leveraging expertise and fostering collaboration across stakeholders to help countries replicate the Swedish Experience.”

Ms Castro was joined at the launch of her new platform by leading international harm reduction experts who unveiled new research showing that Brazil could save 1.36 million lives by 2060 by adopting the Swedish approach.

Earlier research has shown that three million more Europeans would be alive today if other countries had implemented Sweden’s comprehensive approach to helping smokers quit.

Meanwhile, a study of low and middle-income countries (LMICs) shows that, through the adoption of Swedish-style policies, Kazakhstan could prevent 165,000 premature deaths in the next four decades, while South Africa, Bangladesh and Pakistan could save 320,000, 920,000, and 1,200,000 lives, respectively.

Research co-author Dr Anders Milton, a former chair of the World Medical Association and former Secretary General of the Swedish Medical Association, said: “Sweden is winning the war against smoking with a comprehensive approach to tobacco control that supplements traditional cessation and preventive measures with an all-important added element: giving smokers the opportunity to switch to safer alternatives.

“It has set out a policy roadmap that should be treated as a gift to global public health and, potentially, one of the greatest ever breakthroughs in tackling non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

“That’s why QLS is so important. By spreading the message of the Swedish Experience to all corners, many millions of premature deaths - including almost 1.4 million here in Brazil - could be prevented in the next four decades.”

London-based Ms Castro said she had been motivated to launch QLS by her father, a lifelong smoker who lives in Bahia.

Like Brazil’s other 22 million smokers, my father has been deprived of the lifelines given to the Swedes because of regulatory barriers and societal resistance towards alternative nicotine products.

“Quit Like Sweden aims to empower individuals - here in Brazil, and around the globe - to reclaim control over their health.”

Dave Cross avatar

Dave Cross

Journalist at POTV
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Dave is a freelance writer; with articles on music, motorbikes, football, pop-science, vaping and tobacco harm reduction in Sounds, Melody Maker, UBG, AWoL, Bike, When Saturday Comes, Vape News Magazine, and syndicated across the Johnston Press group. He was published in an anthology of “Greatest Football Writing”, but still believes this was a mistake. Dave contributes sketches to comedy shows and used to co-host a radio sketch show. He’s worked with numerous start-ups to develop content for their websites.

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