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viqaralam

USA
Topic initiated on Sunday, August 30, 2009  -  6:24 PM Reply with quote
SMOKING, ADDICTION, SUBSTANCE ABUSE & ISLAM


I would like to open this discussion as it seems that Muslim community is not very open on this issue and not much is done to address this problem. Considering it as a Taboo, feeling shame and fear of being out casted by the Islamic society, people in general do not want to admit and in result are deprived of help. Social, moral, psychological, medical and religious assistance with appropriate timings could save a life. I will share my experience as a Muslim therapist working in a non Muslim society in future postings.

Edited by: viqaralam on Monday, August 31, 2009 1:20 PM
HandS

UNITED KINGDOM
Posted - Tuesday, September 1, 2009  -  11:29 PM Reply with quote
Dear Viqaralam. Like I said below, this initiative of yours will be really appreciated and we need such steps forward to try and find the solutions to this growing problem. Health hazards are rising everyday because of these addictions. People need some other treatment or solution to their depression instead of drugs which destroy them.
viqaralam

USA
Posted - Wednesday, September 2, 2009  -  7:04 PM Reply with quote
Yes, you are right, depression is one among other reasons of addiction. I still think addiction is more social than medical problem.
Young Muslims living in western society are now getting into it. Most of the time it starts from smoking cigarettes and develops into serious addiction to other drugs. Education in the light of Quranic guidance is necessary for young children and their parents. Those who are using drugs due to psychological issues need more intensive medical and psychiatric treatment and mental health therapy by a Muslim therapist who can educate the person in the light of Islamic teachings.
For smoking the best way to quit is combination of nicotine replacement therapy, emotional support and method to change personal habits or working on a program that helps to change behavior.

Edited by: viqaralam on Wednesday, September 02, 2009 7:04 PM
HandS

UNITED KINGDOM
Posted - Thursday, December 17, 2009  -  9:49 PM Reply with quote
Today, the Chief Medical Officer UK has given an official statement against the use of alcohol in children & youth.
"The Chief Medical Officer’s guidance for parents, children and young people is based on the most comprehensive ever review of the scientific evidence and follows an extensive public consultation.

Parents have backed the Chief Medical Officer’s advice that children should avoid alcohol completely before the age of 15.

Following publication of draft guidance in January this year, parents were asked what they thought. Parents from across the country commented on the guidance, with the majority welcoming its focus on parental responsibility and the clear advice on the health effects and risks of children drinking alcohol.

The final five-point guidance published today advises:

1. an alcohol-free childhood is the healthiest and best option - if children drink alcohol, it shouldn't be before they reach 15 years old;

2. if young people aged 15 - 17 years old drink alcohol, it should always be with the guidance of a parent or carer or in a supervised environment;

3. parents and young people should be aware that drinking, even at age 15 or older, can be hazardous to health and not drinking is the healthiest option for young people. If children aged 15 - 17 drink alcohol they should do so infrequently and certainly on no more than one day a week. They should never drink more than the adult daily limits recommended by the NHS;

4. the importance of parental influences on children's alcohol use should be communicated to parents, carers and professionals. Parents and carers need advice on how to respond to alcohol use and misuse by children; and

5. support services must be available for children and young people who have alcohol-related problems and their parents."
http://nds.coi.gov.uk/content/detail.aspx?NewsAreaId=2&;ReleaseID=409657&SubjectId=2

We welcome CMO's suggestion.Some people & agencies are objecting CMO's advice and saying that if kids were not given an opportunity to taste alcohol , they may misuse later. We believe this is not true. This is just like letting people break speed limits on the roads in the beginning of their driving so that they do not over speed later? What is so good about Alcohol anyway. Even if taken in small amounts, it has the potential to harm the health in the long run, or if not, it will not give any health benefit. Rather it will cause damage to health whenever taken in excess. For calming the nerves down and releasing stress, better alternatives can be introduced like sports, charity & faith activities. www.serving-humanity.net

http://www.parentlineplus.org.uk/default.aspx?page=viewarticle&;module=articles-view&id=433&noevent=true#comment4
hkhan

UNITED KINGDOM
Posted - Monday, February 1, 2010  -  6:19 PM Reply with quote
some of our students in the si communities still smoking~ dedicated to them with hope, love & prayers :)

From: "Department of Health" <NDS.DH@coi.gsi.gov.uk>
Date: 1 Feb 2010 00:12:32 +0000
To: <serving.humanity@gmail.com>
Subject: Embargoed to 00.01 Monday 1 February: A Smokefree Future

01/02/2010 00:01

Department of Health

Embargoed to 00.01 Monday 1 February: A Smokefree Future

An ambitious new strategy will halve the number of smokers, from 21 to 10 per cent of the population by 2020, Secretary of State for Health Andy Burnham announced today.

The number of people smoking has fallen by a quarter in the past decade – just last year 337,000 people stopped smoking thanks to free support from the NHS. Under the new strategy, more smokers will be encouraged to get support from the NHS where professional help will be even more accessible and provide a wider range of options will be available to suit everybody.

The vision for a smokefree future builds on the 1998 strategy ‘Smoking Kills’. Since then more than two million people have given up smoking with help from the NHS; striking picture warnings are now on tobacco packs; the age of sale for tobacco has been raised to 18; and virtually all enclosed public and work places are smokefree.

Research shows that seven out of ten smokers want to give up. This strategy will ensure every smoker, no matter what level their addiction is or however many times they’ve tried to stop before, will be able to get help from the NHS if they want to give up. It also acknowledges that some smokers need longer-term support and treatment, but that is better than continuing to smoke.

This next push offers a radical vision for a smokefree future. It sets out several key commitments:


Stopping young people being recruited as smokers by cracking down on cheap illicit cigarettes. Immediate investment in extra overseas officers will stop 200 million cigarettes entering the UK every year.
Every smoker will be able to get help from the NHS to suit them if they want to give up - new types of support will be available at times and in places that suit smokers.
The Government will carefully consider the case for plain packaging.
Stopping the sale of tobacco from vending machines – a significant source of tobacco for young people.
Protecting everyone, especially children, from the harms of second-hand smoke by promoting smokefree homes and cars and reviewing smokefree law. This review will include, for example, whether to extend legislation from enclosed public places and workplaces to areas like entrances to buildings.
The NHS is key to helping the many millions of people who try to quit each year but are unsuccessful. Individually targeted support and treatment will recognise that people have different triggers and levels of addiction. As a result, different methods will be used, including using nicotine replacement therapy for an extended period of time.

Health Secretary Andy Burnham said:

"The Government has made massive progress on tobacco over the past decade. Ten years ago, millions more people smoked and many have died early as a result.

“We’ve come so far and now we’ll go even further - to push forward and save even more lives. Today’s strategy renews our commitment to virtually eradicate the health harms caused by smoking, and I firmly believe we can halve smoking by 2020. In ten years’ time, only one in ten people will smoke.

“Government should and will do everything in its power to protect young people. This includes putting a stop to cheap tobacco that is smuggled into the country by organised criminal gangs.

“Most smokers start before they are 18, so we have to discourage children and young people from ever starting. Now that we’ve banned advertising and will soon see an end to attractive displays in shops, the only remaining method of advertising tobacco is the packaging. So we will carefully consider whether there is evidence for making tobacco companies use plain packets.

"We will always help people to quit, and smokers should never stop trying. That’s the beauty of the NHS – it’s there to help everyone. One day, in the not too distant future, we’ll look back and find it hard to remember why anyone ever smoked in the first place.”

Chief Medical Officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, said:

"We must keep pushing hard for a tobacco free future and keep up the momentum gained by England going smokefree in 2007. Since then, the number of people who have given up smoking has increased, so this new strategy and targeted support will help smokers who want to quit, to give up for good. It will also discourage children from taking up smoking and prevent a great number of unnecessary and early deaths."

Although smoking rates are declining, the epidemic is far from solved, with more than 80,000 deaths attributed to smoking a year. Smoking costs the NHS £2.7 billion a year and our communities much more.

The recent success of the Health Act 2009 in banning the retail display of tobacco products and prohibiting the sale of tobacco from vending machines, will reduce exposure to advertising and remove the largely unsupervised sale of tobacco to children.








Contacts:


NDS Enquiries


Phone: For enquiries please contact the above department

Email: ndsenquiries@coi.gsi.gov.uk




Notes to editors:

Regulations to prohibit the sale of tobacco from vending machines will be subject to parliamentary consideration.

For media enquiries and interview bids, please contact the Department of Health Newsdesk on 020 7210 5221.

Further details of the strategy include work to:

Stop the inflow of young people recruited as smokers

The Government will:


Reduce tobacco affordability by continuing to crack down on illicit tobacco and consider increases in tobacco duty on a Budget-by-Budget basis.
Restrict tobacco availability by continuing to tackle the supply of tobacco to children.

Assisting every smoker to stop their dependence on tobacco

We will:


Introduce a radical approach to quitting smoking, producing more ways of quitting that we believe will help thousands more smokers - particularly those in disadvantaged communities and the routine and manual group - to quit successfully. Although always encouraging smokers to break their nicotine dependence entirely, we will support smokers to:
cut down their levels of smoking before completely quitting;
manage their nicotine addiction, using a safer alternative product, when they are unable to smoke;
dramatically reduce their health harms, and the harms to those around them, by using a safer alternative to smoking.



Motivate more smokers to quit by developing a new tobacco control marketing strategy and investigating new and innovative ways to quit. We will improve NHS Stop Smoking Services by improving referrals in health and social services, and local commissioning of cessation services.


Protecting our families and communities from tobacco-related harm

We will:


Promote smokefree environments by reviewing smokefree law later this year and through working with the public sector, business and the public to communicate the dangers of smoking in the home and in the car. We will consider as part of a review of the Health Act 2006 what further action is needed to protect people, including support for smokefree prisons and protection for children from secondhand smoke exposure. We will also encourage and celebrate a tobacco free 2012 London Olympics without the use or sale of tobacco products at Olympic venues.
Identify and target high smoking rates in vulnerable, disadvantaged and minority communities by supporting PCTs to develop public health interventions that consider lifestyle factors as a whole and help tackle the social, economic and cultural factors that influence smoking rates through local partnerships.
Reduce smoking in pregnancy by improving methods of identifying and reporting on smoking in pregnancy and developing care pathways to treat and support cessation activities in pregnancy.

The current tobacco control strategy, ‘Smoking Kills’ (1998) was a landmark in global tobacco control. In the decade between 1998 and 2007, action by the Government and the NHS more than halved the number of children taking up smoking and reduced the smoking population by a quarter – meaning over 2 million fewer smokers in England.

In July 2007, with the support of business, local authorities and health campaigners the Government implemented smokefree law in virtually all enclosed work and public places. This provides protection for workers and the general public from the harms of secondhand smoke, and enjoys huge public support and nearly 100% compliance.

However, while smoking rates are declining, the epidemic is far from solved. About a fifth of the adult population or over 8 million people still smoke and every year an estimated 200,000 young people start smoking. Smoking continues to be the leading cause of preventable death in England and one of the main causes of health inequality. In 2007, more than 80,000 premature deaths in England and 1.4 million hospital admissions were attributable to smoking, costing the NHS £2.7 billion a year and society much more in overall economic terms.

MHRA statement

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is announcing an extended indication, to include harm reduction, which has been granted for a nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) inhalator available through general sales outlets.

The advice from the Commission on Human Medicines (CHM) strongly supports the concept of harm reduction; which is a positive move, for those wishing to minimize the risks of tobacco smoke to both themselves and others.

The MHRA is also encouraging the development and the wider availability of safer nicotine delivery medicines. To create a level playing field, the MHRA will be consulting on whether to regulate all nicotine containing products (with the exception of tobacco products, which are governed through specific legislation). To view the consultation, please visit www.mhra.gov.uk




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