Thursday 3 March 2011

Row over ASH Scotland tobacco and alcohol summit

ASH Scotland, with two new allies Alcohol Focus Scotland and Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems, has announced a conference dubbed Scottish Tobacco and Alcohol Policy Summit.

Such a grandiose title leads to great expectations, and sure enough we will have a panel of experts and another of politicians, for all the world resembling an Any Questions media event, or even a hustings. So can we expect an inclusive meeting, where we all get to suggest how to overcome our national tobacco and alcohol issues?

Well – no. Only some of us get in, for a start.

Herald, 2 March 2011, p. 2
(Click to enlarge)
In order to 'consider what progress has been made in alcohol control and tobacco control and explore what each sector might learn from the other', we must have no industry interference. Straight from Article 5.3 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which requires exclusion of 'industry' from health policy discussions, adopted by ASH Scotland and imitated by Alcohol Focus Scotland, in their statement in the Herald today (see final paragraph of cutting above).

The Whisky and Spirits Trade Association spokesman Gavin Partington understandably has difficulty in having his industry treated by Alcohol Focus Scotland in the same way as ASH Scotland treats the tobacco industry. While I have sympathy (it is not nice to be sidelined from vital discussions about your industry's future), he has perhaps failed to realise how little of the health industry's agenda is about health. But it's perhaps hard to realise this without being at the sharp end of official efforts to exclude you from industry policy discussions and denormalise the users of your product.

I'll say it again: policy is a matter of reconciling interests. Policy isn't satisfactory when participants, the most knowledgeable players, are left out. There is no legitimate interest in keeping people out of health policy, be they doctors or tobacco magnates. Above all, public discussion should be open.

Well done to the Herald, for reporting the only newsworthy fact about this policy summit that has hit the mainstream media so far. The Scotsman can go to the bottom of the class.  

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Scotsman? just an extension of the BBC isn't it?

health quotes. said...

While I have sympathy (it is not nice to be sidelined from vital discussions about your industry's future), he has perhaps failed to realise how little of the health industry's agenda is about health.

Anonymous said...

a piece in The Edinburgh Evening News (part of the Scotsman group) was headlined 'Alcohol and cigarette experts plan summit'.

Guess who is quoted...Yep, Sheila Duffy. Sheila? Expert?

No' Deid Yet

Anonymous said...

The Drinks Industry has a strong case to be invited to the table , unless the organisers have something to hide

http://www.icap.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=8S1dorDpOrQ%3d&tabid=246

They must also accept that they are being targeted in the same way as the Tobacco Industry, just at a time when it is roumoured that a vaccine is being trialed to cure alcoholism