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Related: Beijing unveils plans for "green"
Games
BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhua) -- China, with 350 million
smokers - about one third of the world's smoking population - has vowed to put
on a "non-smoking" Olympic Games.
Zhang Bin, an official with the Ministry of Health
(MOH), said on Monday that smoking will be banned at all hospitals that will be
used specifically for the Games by the end of 2007.
The ban will extend to public transport and public
buildings, with places that offer services to children the main concern, Zhang
said.
In his meeting with World Health Organization
Director-General Lee Jong-Wook in 2004, Premier Wen Jiabao said a non-smoking
Games is on top of the agenda for China's preparations for a green Olympics.
The ministry has learned from the practice and
experience of previous Games hosts, Zhang acknowledged.
The concept of a "non-smoking" Olympic Games,
initiated in 1988,was put into practice in Barcelona in 1992.
Considering the country's large smoking population,
Zhang warned that China faces many obstacles to overcome in hosting a
non-smoking Olympics.
The largest tobacco producer and consumer in the
world, China reports about one million deaths from smoking a year, and the
figure is expected to reach three million by 2050.
The spread of smoking results in the heavy burden of
providing medical treatment for illnesses like lung cancer, said Yang Gonghuan,
deputy director of the China's Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
"It is society who has to foot the cost of medical
treatment made by tobacco promotion," she said, underscoring that tobacco
control needs the participation of NGOs and people from all walks of life, she
said.
She called for a prompt implementation of the
national action plan on tobacco control with priority placed on teenage
education and publicity.
The expert also appealed for promulgating national
laws to ban smoking in public places and to beef up early detection and
treatment of lung cancer.
"The current consumption of cigarettes will see an
increase in deaths from lung cancer in the next 20 to 30 years, apart from other
causes like the aging of the population, greater industrialization and
deterioration of environment," she continued.
Unfortunately, China is still slow in detecting lung
cancer and most patients do not receive the necessary surgery in time, said Qiao
Youlin, researcher with the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, who specializes
in cancer treatment.
"The high cost of early detection methods of lung
cancer prevents early diagnosis, especially in rural areas," he told Xinhua.
The new cooperative rural medicare system promoted by
the government in the past few years has only provided farmers with about 50
yuan (6.25 U.S. dollars) for healthcare, but the screening costs about 300 yuan
(37.5 U.S. dollars), he said.
"Therefore, China's treatment of lung cancer still
lags far behind developed nations," said Qiao, adding that the five-year
survival rate of lung cancer patients in developed nations is 15 percent, but
less than 10 percent in China. Enditem |