Views from Western Australia

May 20, 2008

Prisons without tobacco

Prisoners and prison officers deserve the same level of care and protection from the harmful effects of smoking as everyone else in the community.

The prevalence of tobacco use in Australian prisons remains extremely high at 80%, in contrast with the continuing decline of smoking in the wider community. Smoking in custodial settings is a major priority because high prisoner smoking rates have significant health and economic implications.

‘Prison culture’, which makes tobacco smoking accepted as the norm is problematic; and the lack of any political commitment towards addressing tobacco use in prisons is worrying.

In 2005 California banned the possession, sale, and use of all tobacco products for inmates, employees, and visitors to the State’s 32 prisons. With over 160,000 people incarcerated California has the largest prisoner population in the US. It was estimated that about 80,000 of those prisoners were smokers and a study reported that tobacco use cost California an average of $3,500 per smoking prisoner every year in health costs. Hence, the bans were expected to reduce the state’s inmate health care expenses by about $280 million annually.

Prisons without tobacco are becoming the norm across the US and the experience has generally been very positive. In 2004 smoking was outlawed in 105 federal penitentiaries that accommodate roughly 180,000 inmates. At least ten States have bans where the use and possession of tobacco products is outlawed on prison property.

But what is happening in Australia?

Western Australia has the lowest smoking rates in the country and the Australian Council on Smoking and Health (ACOSH) has urged the introduction of smokefree prisons in WA with the last two Ministers for Corrective Services.

Late last year ACOSH was contacted by prison officers from Greenough Regional Prison who were extremely concerned about the health risks of work in a smoke-filled environment.

The prison officers also sent a petition to their local member and requested him to table it in the State parliament. It had been signed by about half the staff and was a heartfelt plea for a smokefree environment.

They discussed it with the local member, who was very supportive and took action on their behalf with the petition. The Minister subsequently made an initial announcement to the media.

ACOSH has received positive support and positive feedback about Greenough from prisons around the State and other parts of Australia; smoking is topical in prisons everywhere.

ACOSH have also received letters from prisoners in WA prisons who are really concerned about the effects of other people’s smoke on their health.

The recent announcement by the Minister of trialing a partial ban on smoking in Greenough Regional Prison is inadequate and it is a desperately slow response to requests from prison staff.

The case for a ban on smoking in prisons is clear and overwhelming. It will protect the health of prisoners and prison staff. Failing to ban smoking in cells overnight, for instance, will make the trial pathetically weak. This was one of the major concerns for prison officers because they say the air is thick with smoke when they open the cells every morning.

The Minister’s announcement was well intentioned, but she appears to have been poorly advised.

This 12 month trial of a partial smoking ban in one regional prison is the weakest possible response to calls for a complete ban on smoking in all Western Australian prisons. Partial bans get partial results and cannot be expected to succeed; prisoners will remain exposed to all the cues that encourage smoking.

Prisoners and prison staff deserve to have their health protected just as much as other members of the community. A complete ban on smoking in prisons should be carefully planned and implemented. It should be introduced properly, rather than this half baked approach which is a recipe for failure.

Interestingly, WA’s Frankland Centre (which is a specialist correctional facility for those with mental illnes) like the rest of the health system has been smokefree since last June and it had a very successful and smooth implementation.

Staff at Greenough prison requested a complete ban; and the case for the ban on smoking is overwhelming on health and occupational safety grounds.

The Minister clearly supports a ban in principle, but she appears to have been convinced by Bureaucrats to opt for the least effective approach.

We encourage the Minister to act firmly in the interests of prisoner and staff health.

ABC Radio National, ‘Perspectives’
14 May 2008

“Advocacy in tobacco control” - Respiratory Network Forum - Friday, 9 May 2008

Filed under: General

INTRODUCTION
“Australia has one of the best organised, best financed, most politically savvy and well-connected anti-smoking movements in the world. They are aggressive and have been able to use the levers of power very effectively to propose and pass draconian legislation. . . . The implications of Australian anti-smoking activity are significant outside Australia because Australia is a seedbed for anti-smoking programs around the world.”  This is taken from a Philip Morris (Australia): Corporate Affairs Planning Document, 1992 [Online]. Available: www.pmdocs.com. Bates no. 2023240608_0627.

Today I will briefly outline how advocacy has been an import tool in the decline in smoking prevalence in Australia, and will note key advocacy targets for decreasing smoking prevalence in the future.

TOBACCO SMOKING: THE DECLINE IN PREVALENCE
In Australia, there has been a largely uninterrupted decline in smoking prevalence since the early 1960s, when an estimated 58 per cent of men and 28 per cent of women smoked.

In  2004 WA smoking prevalence was 15.5 % of people over 14 years of age who smoked on a daily basis.  In 2007  the national figure is down to 16.6%  of people over 14 years of age who smoked on a daily basis.

Recently published figures indicate that smoking rates of Western Australian 12 to 15-year-olds has dropped from 19.4 per cent in 1984 and 15.2 per cent in 1999 to five per cent in 2005.  The percentage of 16 to 17-year-olds who smoke has fallen from 21.4 per cent in 1999 to 9.8 per cent.

HOW HAS THIS BEEN ACHIEVED?
Efforts to explain the rapidly declining tobacco usage usually point to mileposts since 1970, which marked the introduction of various tobacco control policies, laws, and prominent antismoking campaigns. The advocacy that led to the introduction of a law for tobacco control is rarely considered. Yet when you ask, “How did WA manage to ban smoking in pubs and clubs?” any answer must place advocacy at center stage.

Australia has one of the world’s most successful records on tobacco control. The role of public health advocacy in securing public and political support for tobacco control legislation and policy and program support is widely acknowledged.

As a result Australia has:

• among the world’s most expensive cigarettes;

• among the world’s most prominent health warnings on cigarette packets; plans to implement these saw prolonged periods of lobbying by the industry;

• smokeless tobacco - In 1986, the South Australian government became the first government in the world to ban smokeless tobacco, his ban later went national;

• a total ban on all advertising and promotion of cigarettes;

• mass reach media campaigns; In the late 1970s, Australia was one of the first nations to run mass-reach antismoking campaigns;

• Quitline services that provide advice and support to smokers trying to quit smoking;

• relatively high tobacco taxes by international standards; there has been a great deal of industry lobbying to restrain further rises;

• extensive media coverage of tobacco control;

• legislation that prohibits tobacco smoking in enclosed workplaces, (including restaurants, cafes, pubs, clubs and nightclubs) and public transport;

• reduced displays at point of sale and implementation of retailer and wholesaler licenses;

• local government moving on smokefree children’s playgrounds, al fresco and beaches; and

• a smokefree public health system, including all psychiatric facilities.

There have also been recent announcements regarding:

• banning additives and flavourings that make smoking more palatable to children;

• introducing fire-safe cigarettes by 2009, and

• a commitment to fund Indigenous tobacco control.

These initiatives don’t just fall out of the sky; they are the result of an ongoing advocacy campaign.

SOME OF THE HOW
The objectives of advocacy involve changing health policy and laws rather than efforts focused on persuading individuals to quit smoking.

Invariably, the objectives are contested. This means that there are readily identifiable and often determined opponents of the changes being proposed (example Australian Hotels Association fought against the introduction of smokefree pubs and delayed its implementation for ten years).

Since many of advocacy’s goals require political reform, advocacy is unavoidably a political activity.

The ability to frame a public health issue successfully, to attract public and political support, is a core skill of advocacy. Mass media is critical and requires extensive coverage of the issue in the news media. Wide and positive cover by the media is important in developing supportive public and political environments.

Advocacy campaigns, while often highly planned and strategically governed, are also responsive and opportunistic. For example, as recently as April 2008: Major media attention was focused on the announcement to increase tax on ‘alco pops’; this became a catalyst for a call for tax increases on tobacco.

WHERE TO FROM HERE?
In order to achieve a further reduction in prevalence and consumption of tobacco smoking, Australia needs to continue the comprehensive tobacco control programs already in place, as well as:

• providing more funding for sustainable, high profile public information campaigns for tobacco control,

• end donations to political parties by tobacco companies,

• removing any exemptions in existing legislation to ensure that all enclosed workplaces (including Burswood & prisons) are smoke free,

• developing and implementing a regulatory framework to control all aspects of tobacco production, packaging, marketing, and taxation,

• all tobacco products under the counter at point of sale

• smokefree al fresco dining,
• all government agencies to go smokefree (including prisons, people with disabilities and universities),

• smokefree cars,

• funding for public education,

• taxation increase,

• generic packaging,

• smokefree movies, and

• local government (as a broad area).

In closing, advocacy may seem to be a loose and inexact science, developing as an advocate demands a range of communicative, philosophical and technical skills.

As ‘tobacco control’ could now be considered to be ‘on a roll’, a range of strategies to advance its objectives are being considered and that is terrific. However, this should not blind leadership in the public health community to the importance of ongoing, well resourced advocacy that is proven to work.

Stephen Hall
Executive Director of the Australian Council on Smoking & Health


 

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