4.5 Article

From silos to policy coherence: tobacco control, unhealthy commodity industries and the commercial determinants of health

Journal

TOBACCO CONTROL
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 322-327

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2021-057136

Keywords

global health; environment; low; middle income country; disparities; tobacco industry

Funding

  1. SPECTRUM Consortium - UK Prevention Research Partnership [MR/S037519/1]
  2. Department of Health and Social Care (England)
  3. UK devolved administrations, and leading health research charities

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Tobacco control has achieved remarkable successes and can serve as a model for addressing non-communicable disease epidemics. The harms caused by tobacco and other unhealthy commodity industries highlight the need for collaboration across health, development, and environmental agendas. Embracing a commercial determinants of health perspective is crucial for advancing tobacco control and promoting sustainable development.
Tobacco control has achieved remarkable successes, underpinned by the distinctive norms codified in Article 5.3 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Tobacco control's experience in managing conflicts of interest is increasingly recognised as relevant for addressing other non-communicable disease epidemics. At the same time, the wider environmental and social harms of tobacco-and other unhealthy commodity industries-underline the potential for enhanced strategic collaboration across health, development and environmental agendas. Such collaboration is increasingly necessary to address key challenges shared across tobacco control and related policy spheres, including the extent to which the harms of tobacco (and other unhealthy commodities) are underpinned by economic and social inequities. Here we demonstrate the relevance of a commercial determinants of health perspective, both for advancing tobacco control and for linking it with health and development more broadly. This perspective is already evident in many areas of research, policy and advocacy, where innovative approaches support the development of closer links with actors in related fields. We draw on the concepts of policy coordination, coherence and integration to show how tobacco control can advance key strategic goals via information sharing, complementary approaches to common problems and collective action with other related movements. Embrace of a commercial determinants perspective will help in building on tobacco control's successes and reorienting strategies in other sectors to more effectively manage health risks and promote sustainable development.

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