1. Local responses to the Maharashtra gutka and pan masala ban: a report from Mumbai.
- Author
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Nair, S., Schensul, J. J., Bilgi, S., Kadam, V., D'Mello, S., and Donta, B.
- Subjects
TOBACCO products ,CANCER risk factors ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,SOCIAL norms ,SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,TUMOR prevention ,INDUSTRIES ,INFERTILITY ,PLANTS ,POVERTY ,RESEARCH funding ,SMOKELESS tobacco ,SMOKING cessation ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TUMORS ,CITY dwellers ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: The Maharashtra government has banned the production, sale, distribution and storage of gutka, and pan masala in the Maharashtra State due to the increasing burden of cancer and reproductive health problems attributable to the use of these products. In view of this, it is important to understand the way producers', sellers' and users' are adapting to the ban.Objective: During the two months following the ban (July 19 th through Sept 30, 2012), a research team studying smokeless tobacco use and promotion in a low income community of Mumbai conducted rapid surveillance to assess the impact of the ban in the study community.Materials and Methods: Assessment involved documenting new points of sale, informal observations of tobacco use, and interviews with thirteen shop owners and eight gutka users'. Overall changes in accessibility, availability, patterns of use of tobacco products, perception of ban, social norms and surveillance activities were assessed.Results: Tobacco companies were marketing new products that resembled gutka, under similar brand logos. Surveillance, financial and social cost of selling gutka or using it in public have had an immediate effect on reducing local supply, demand and use and increasing stigma associated with its use. There was an increased recognition of ill-effects of gutka on cancer among sellers' but not overall.Conclusions: To reduce the overall consumption of tobacco in the community, it is critical to include programs that create awareness about effects of smokeless tobacco on health and sustain surveillance levels. This would maintain requirements of the ban, and sustain limits on accessibility, availability and use of these products in the community and other similar communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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