a lit cigarette burning on the side of some railings
Image: andres siimon under CC BY 2.0

Smokefree Generation Programme aims to combat smoking addiction on the Isle of Wight

Councillors will be asked to endorse an anti-smoking plan on Thursday as the habit continues to be the Island’s most preventable cause of premature death.

County Hall’s Health and Wellbeing Board will be updated on the Smokefree Generation Programme – a strategy to tackle what the council has termed a ‘preventable addiction’ and ‘main driver’ of the Isle of Wight’s health inequalities.

Smoking policies can lower smoking rates
Successful smoking policies can lower smoking rates among the public by stopping people from taking up the habit and helping existing smokers to give it up, according to a report due to be presented on Thursday.

The document states,

“Smoking is no longer considered a lifestyle choice but a preventable addiction, often starting in youth, that requires treatment.

“In 2023, it was estimated that 10.1 per cent of the adult residents on the Isle of Wight smoked, with differences in smoking rates by socio-demographic groups, for example rates being higher in routine and manual workers (19.9) per cent and residents with long term mental health conditions (25.5) per cent.

“Considering factors like productivity, fire hazards, health, and social care, smoking could cost the Isle of Wight public services £46.7 million and is responsible for more than 600 smoking attributed deaths between 2017 and 2019.”

Smokefree Generation Programme
The council’s Public Health Team administers the Smokefree Generation Programme which has four main areas of focus for next year.

The first, ‘building capacity’, involves expanding County Hall’s commissioned stop smoking service which currently helps over 500 people ditch the habit each year.

‘Collaborative working’ includes a multi-agency Isle of Wight Tobacco Control Sub-Group tasked with the prevention of smoking and vaping and the treatment of tobacco addiction.

Improving the health and wellbeing of Islanders
The body’s work is directed by the Isle of Wight Public Health Strategy, a plan to improve the health and wellbeing of Island residents.

Another element of collaborative working is helping schools and colleges offer teachers, carers and parents with resources relating to smoking and vaping.

‘Building demand’ consists of all year round marketing and communication campaigns which are targeted at groups more at risk such as young people and pregnant women.

University assessment
The last plank of the scheme, ‘evaluation’, means working with a university to assess the effect of the Smokefree Generation Programme on the level of smoking across the Island, methods of working with partners and cost-effectiveness.


This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed

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alaniow
2, January 2021 4:54 pm

Keeping schools closed simply makes sense. It help to protect us all.

Rhos yr Alarch
Reply to  alaniow
2, January 2021 4:58 pm

Yes, let’s listen to the medical advice, which points to closing schools in high infection areas like ours. If they are being kept open for political reasons that is shameful. If some seek to make political capital out of their being kept open, that is equally shameful. Let’s do whatever is best for saving lives – that is too important for other considerations…

Benny C
Reply to  alaniow
3, January 2021 10:41 pm

To voters in Niton and Chale – your Councillor is de facto supporting sending children in your community to school in the face of common sense, medical advice and entirely justifiable parental intuition. Time and again naive optimism, dithering and delay has allowed the virus to gain ground when it could have been contained. Niton, you have a school, are you seriously happy about this? Equally are… Read more »

henry
2, January 2021 5:00 pm

But we know the Conservative Party doesn’t really care about the wellbeing of children, or anything other than the economy

Rhos yr Alarch
Reply to  henry
2, January 2021 5:03 pm

Sadly allowing the virus to run riot ends up being no good for the economy either, as we have seen all too often…

joeandalice
Reply to  henry
3, January 2021 12:22 pm

they have destroyed the economy for the last nine months!

lauque
Reply to  joeandalice
3, January 2021 5:44 pm

Heads up: dead people can’t work. Neither can those who are off sick.

alisonjane
2, January 2021 5:39 pm

Head Teachers of all schools on The Isle Of Wight tell them No!
Schools in Tier 4 in London have been told to delay pupils returning.
The Isle Of Wight is also Tier 4.
The safety of our children must be paramount.

joeandalice
Reply to  alisonjane
3, January 2021 12:22 pm

the safety of the children? they’re not at risk!

truth
2, January 2021 9:28 pm

If distance learning had been implemented in September, with schools open for children of essential workers and vulnerable only, then infection rates would be a fraction of what they are now. How any Government can continue to ignore SAGE on this is staggering: and how BJ can stand there, at a press conference, and tell the public that schools are safe, when everyone knows they aren’t safe,… Read more »

uosf9
Reply to  truth
2, January 2021 10:49 pm

You can’t expect much with Johnson and ‘Stupid Boy’ Williamson in charge.

planespeaker
3, January 2021 8:37 am

An interruption to children’s learning is temporary. Death is permanent.

planespeaker
Reply to  planespeaker
3, January 2021 11:48 am

Odd to get even one thumbs down to the above. I’d love to know the thinking there.

peter1
3, January 2021 12:36 pm

Keeping schools closed is now the only possible action. The Council lost it by not closing down the Island from Tier 4; and this is the result! Councillors are paid, yes paid good money; to think and look our community

peter1
3, January 2021 2:51 pm

Lets no forget what the IWCC have done. Forget our social prejudices and give them a kick up the bum in the coming Council Elections

Jenny Smart
3, January 2021 8:05 pm

It’s 20.00hrs on Sunday 3rd January, and any comment about the crisis facing many island schools tomorrow from either Cllr Dave Stewart, or Bob Seely, has been deafening.

Mark L Francis
4, January 2021 9:51 am

The problem is the new variant Covid – but this has evolved to gain a foothold amongst school-aged children precisely BECAUSE Government action in locking down everyone EXCEPT school children has applied a selective evolutionary pressure favouring the variant. School kids are 7x more likely to be infected (asymptomatically). My niece caught it 2x from her school aged son & collapsed on the floor. Now they want… Read more »

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