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dubai - People in the UAE will now only be able to buy limited amounts of dokha, while all products will also carry pictorial warnings, according to new standards approved by the National Tobacco Control Programme under the Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHAP).
The new standards have been developed by the Emirates Metrology and Standardisation Authority (ESMA) and approved by the ministry. Pictorial warnings on all other tobacco products have been in place since 2012.
"These regulations for dokha should be in place by the end of the year," Dr Wedad Al Maidoor, director of Primary Healthcare Centre & National Programme of Tobacco Control, told Khaleej Times ahead of World No Tobacco Day that is marked each year on May 31.
A draft of standards and specifications for e-cigarettes is also ready with ESMA but is still pending approval.
Dr Wedad said that under the new regulations, dokha now cannot be bottled and refilled or manufactured at home or shops. "These new standards are being put in place to control the unlimited use of dokha which is a growing in popularity among the youth," she said.
Results from a health screenings study done in Abu Dhabi in 2016 showed that almost 30 per cent of Emiratis in their thirties smoked medwakh.
Dokha is a traditional form of Arabic tobacco. After laws governing the sale of cigarettes and shisha were tightened in 2012, with shops facing hefty fines if they sold to those under 18, many youngsters turned to smoking dokha. Selling medwakh and dokha to minors is also illegal. However, dokha is cheaper compared to cigarettes and can be bought for anywhere between Dh25-Dh40, and pipes for Dh50.
Every year, on May 31, the World Health Organisation (WHO) and partners mark World No Tobacco Day, highlighting health and other risks associated with tobacco use, and advocating for effective policies to reduce tobacco consumption. This year, World No Tobacco Day focuses on tobacco and heart disease. The campaign's slogan is "Tobacco breaks hearts. Choose health, not tobacco".
On World No Tobacco Day 2018, WHO encourages: . Cardiovascular communities and specialists to take charge, educate and lead, to limit tobacco use and so contain this cardiovascular disease epidemic at national and regional levels. . The public at large to make every effort to reduce the risks to their heart health by quitting tobacco, avoiding its use and exposure to secondhand smoke. . Governments to take all possible action to control tobacco use and raise public awareness of the link between tobacco use and heart disease. . Countries and civil society to scale up prevention and control of cardiovascular disease by intensifying action on the six MPOWER measures in line with the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and so reduce demand for tobacco. The 6 MPOWER measures are: monitor tobacco use and prevention policies; protect people from tobacco smoke; offer help to quit; warn about the dangers; enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and raise taxes on tobacco. |
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