WHO’s social media campaign promotes smoke-free environment

A three-month social media campaign against smoking was launched by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Vietnam in partnership with key tobacco control partners in Hanoi on September 27.
WHO’s social media campaign promotes smoke-free environment ảnh 1Illustrative image. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – A three-month social media campaign againstsmoking was launched by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Vietnam inpartnership with key tobacco control partners in Hanoi on September 27.

Themed “#Respect,” the campaign aims to promote a smoke-freeenvironment to protect and improve public health.

It calls on everyone, smokers and non-smokers, to respect the law ontobacco control and respect their and others’ health by ending indoor smokingat public spaces to prevent exposure to second-hand smoke.

The hashtag #Respect was created to help people spread anti-smokingmessages on social networks and the public is encouraged to support thecampaign by sharing posts, making supportive comments and creatingtobacco-related stories with the hashtag.

The campaign’s launch coincided with the third United NationsHigh-Level Meeting on Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) in New York. “This way, we also aim to highlight how smoking remainsone of the leading causes of NCDs, and call for political commitment and publicsupport to address the challenge,” said Dr Kidong Park, WHO Representative inVietnam.

#Respect is a collaborative campaign among organisationschampioning tobacco-free initiatives in the country. Joining the WHO are Campaignfor Tobacco-Free Kids (TFK), Community Research and Development Services (CDS),the Development and Policies Research Center (DEPOCEN), Hanoi University ofPublic Health (HUPH), HealthBridge Vietnam, Thuongmai University, VietnamPublic Health Association (VPHA) and Vital Strategies.

"There is no safe level of exposure tosecond-hand tobacco smoke," said Tom Carroll, Senior Advisor, Policy,Advocacy and Communication, Vital Strategies. "Engaging social media usersand encouraging non-smokers to speak up will help improve compliance withVietnam's smoke-free laws, protecting the health of smokers and non-smokers,especially women and children.”

According to the WHO, some 40,000 people in Vietnam die each year from tobacco-relateddiseases, such as strokes and coronary artery diseases. Thirty percent of allheart disease deaths are caused by smoking.

Almost one in two adult males (45.3 percent) in thecountry are smokers. In addition, nearly 34.5 million non-smokers are exposedto second-hand smoking at home, at restaurants, hotels and in the workplace.

Vietnamis among countries in the Western Pacific Region that have ratified the WHOFramework Convention on Tobacco Control. It obliges countries to take steps toreduce the demand for and supply of tobacco products. This includes protectingpeople from exposure to tobacco smoke, banning tobacco advertising, promotionand sponsorship, requiring health warnings on tobacco packaging and increasingtobacco taxes.

In2013, Vietnam also launched the National Strategy on Tobacco Control through2020, which aims to reduce the smoking rate among youths and adolescents between15-24 years old from 26 percent in 2011 to 18 percent in 2020, and among adultmales from 47.4 percent in 2011 to 39 percent in 2020.  The Tobacco Control Law took effect in the country the same year,prohibiting smoking in indoor public and workplaces.

Thanks to actions made by the Government and tobacco controlpartners, the prevalence of indoor second-hand smoke exposure in most placessignificantly declined from 2010 to 2015, including in the home (73 percentdown to 59 percent), workplace (55 percent to 42 percent), and publictransportation (34 percent to 19 percent). However, exposure prevalence remainedhigh at restaurants (80 percent). –VNA 
VNA

See more

The remains of 12 Vietnamese volunteer soldiers and experts, who laid down their lives in different periods in Laos’ Savannakhet province, are repatriated following a handover ceremony at the Lao Bao (Vietnam's Quang Tri province) - Densavan (Savannakhet) international border gate on May 21. (Photo: VNA)

Remains of Vietnamese fallen soldiers, experts repatriated from Laos

The remains of 12 Vietnamese volunteer soldiers and experts, who laid down their lives in different periods in Laos’ Savannakhet province, were repatriated following a handover ceremony on May 21. They will be re-buried at the Road 9 National Martyrs Cemetery in Vietnam's central province of Quang Tri on May 22.

A veteran offers incense at the war martyrs’ cemetery in Nghi Loc district, Nghe An province. (Photo: VNA)

Nghe An reburies martyrs' remains repatriated from Laos

Vice Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Phung Thanh Vinh said that carrying a noble international duty, many Vietnamese volunteer soldiers and experts heroically joined Lao people in their struggle for national liberation and independence. Many of them sacrificed their lives in the country, including more than 12,000 soldiers laying down in the three provinces of Xaysomboun, Vientiane, and Xiangkhouang.

Caring for the material and spiritual life of the people - such as poverty reduction, access to education and healthcare services - is a concrete expression of the policy of placing people at the core and as the subject of socio-economic development. (Illustrative image. Source: VNA)

📝OP-ED: When people placed at centre of development

Party General Secretary and State President To Lam emphasised: “People are placed at the centre as the main subject in order to realise visions. People are considered the centre, the objective, and the driving force of all policies and actions at all levels.”

The Vietnamese delegation wins two second prizes, one third prize, three fourth prizes, and four special awards granted by sponsors at ISEF 2025. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam obtains best-ever achievements at ISEF

According to the Ministry of Education and Training, the Vietnamese delegation won two second prizes, one third prize, three fourth prizes, and four special awards granted by sponsors.

Secretary of the Bu Dang district Party Committee and Head of the Steering Committee for Eliminating Dilapidated Housing, Vu Luong (fourth from right), performs the ribbon-cutting ceremony to hand over a new house to a disadvantaged household. (Photo: VNA)

19 localities eradicate substandard houses

Four more provinces have announced the completion of efforts to eliminate makeshift and dilapidated housing, bringing the total number of localities achieving this milestone to 19 out of 63 nationwide, according to the Ministry of Ethnic and Religious Affairs.