Campaigns vs threats to nat’l health

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2019 16:45:59 +0000

 

EDITORIAL edt

DRUGS, tobacco smoking, vaping, sugar, salt – these have been in the news lately. There are moves to ban them or limit their use because of the health risks they pose to the general population, leading to complications of various kinds.

Drugs are an old problem around the world. From the start of his administration, President Duterte launched a drive to eliminate it in the country, only to find that it is so widespread that police efforts against it have met with so much violence.

Smoking has long been known to cause lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmo­nary disease (COPD), stroke, and asthma, due to chemicals that are released as the cigarette burns, but addiction is so widespread due to the nicotine in tobacco.

Vaping was invented to help tobacco smokers stop their vice, with smoke but not from burning. But it still contains nicotine that causes addiction and last week, President Duterte prohibited vaping in public after a teenager contracted a lung illness blamed on vaping.

Too much sugar increases the risk of diabetes, obesity, and tooth decay. Many healthy foods like milk, vegetables, and fruit naturally contain sugar, but it be­comes a health risk when it is added in great quantities to soft drinks, causing weight gain and increasing the risk of diabetes and heart disease.

Too much salt can raise blood pressure and the risk of heart disease and stroke. There is now a move to increase the tax on salty foods – just like taxes on alcohol and tobacco – but salt happens to b
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