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November 18, 2004

Hopkins Institute for Global Tobacco Control Receives Elite Recognition from PAHO/WHO

The Institute for Global Tobacco Control (IGTC) at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has been designated a “collaborating center” of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and World Health Organization (WHO). As a collaborating center, the IGTC will work to support global efforts to reduce tobacco use. The IGTC is one of three tobacco control surveillance and evaluation collaborating centers in the United States, joining the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the University of California, San Francisco Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education.

The IGTC will promote research, surveillance, evaluation and training in support of a progressive and aggressive policy development agenda. These activities play a critical role in building and maintaining strong tobacco control programs. The IGTC has been active in all of these areas throughout the world. It participated in the 1996 national smoking survey in China and recently conducted an assessment of second-hand smoke exposure across Latin America.

Jonathan Samet, MD
Jonathan Samet, MD

“The IGTC was selected to be a collaborating center as a result of its commitment to combating the global tobacco epidemic. As part of the School and the Department of Epidemiology, we have an extensive network of partnerships and collaborations that have been established by our faculty. The Institute is in a position to offer real and lasting approaches to control and prevent tobacco-related death and disease,” said Jonathan Samet, MD, director of the IGTC and chair and professor in the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Department of Epidemiology.

Dr. Samet, an international authority on tobacco’s effects on health, explained that the research of the Institute is imperative. “Knowing the scale of a country’s tobacco epidemic, as well as the machinations of tobacco companies, can give researchers the evidence needed to convince governments to adopt new policies and intervention programs,” he said.

Global debates over public smoking, advertising bans and tobacco taxes are clouded by industry influence, politics and cultural beliefs. Yet the science on the health effects of tobacco has never been clearer. By 2030, health experts estimate that deaths from tobacco will surpass any other cause.

Frances Stillman
Frances Stillman, EdD, EdM

Frances Stillman, EdD, EdM, co-director of the Institute and an associate research professor in the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Department of Epidemiology, said, “Since the Institute’s inception six years ago, we’ve been working with PAHO and WHO on various tobacco-related issues. This designation is a natural extension of our current working relationship. All three organizations—our Institute, PAHO and WHO—share a common goal of stopping tobacco use in developing countries and widening controls to fight tobacco companies who are promoting this habit to unsuspecting people. This designation will strengthen the ongoing research we have in about 20 countries around the world.”

The Institute will continue to serve as an educational resource on tobacco-related topics, offering courses and training workshops, and undertaking tobacco control policy and intervention projects.

Public Affairs media contacts for the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health: Kenna Lowe or Tim Parsons at 410-955-6878 or paffairs@jhsph.edu. Photographs of Jonathan Samet and Frances Stillman are available upon request.

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