Noting the average age at which young people began smoking had fallen to 11, he said: "The younger one begins, the worse the consequences will be.”
Neuberger claimed the government had been doing too little to get young people not to smoke. "It is easier to buy cigarettes than groceries,” he said, adding the government should use the 60 million Euros in cigarette taxes that young smokers paid annually to pay for a prevention campaign.
Neuberger called protection of non-smokers in Austria "a health and political time bomb” and said the country was on the level of the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, Albania and Serbia in that regard. The doctor cited polls in Styria and Upper Austria that had shown 91 percent of people who visited nightspots felt harmed by secondary smoke and 60 percent of them wanted the law on smoking toughened.
Tamas Fazekas from Vienna’s St. Anna Children’s Hospital called for "an absolute ban on smoking in public areas. We are already finding illnesses in children that previously occurred only in adults.” She warned that pregnant women’s exposure to secondary smoke could lead to premature births and development of asthma in young children. She also claimed exposure of children to secondary smoke made it more likely they would start smoking and noted 80 percent of children of smokers became smokers themselves.
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Reference: Austria tops teen smokers ranking by Lisa Chapman, WienerZeitung.at,
I agree with you. However free non profitable organisation should join anti smoking campaign to help youg people to quit smoking.
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