Brief Summary
This video discusses Kenya's efforts to combat tobacco use in light of World No Tobacco Day 2025. It highlights the progress made through policy interventions, including reduced adult tobacco use and smoking initiation among adolescents. Despite these gains, challenges persist, such as the rising use of flavored nicotine products among young people. The Ministry of Health is implementing strategies like strengthening legislation, enhancing enforcement, expanding public awareness, and providing cessation services to further reduce tobacco consumption and protect public health.
- Adult tobacco use has declined from 11.6% in 2014 to 8.5% in 2022.
- Smoking initiation among adolescents has dropped by 15% since 2020.
- Over 650,000 adolescents between 10 and 17 have experimented with tobacco or nicotine products.
- The Ministry of Health is scaling up public awareness, strengthening retail surveillance, and expanding cessation services.
Introduction: World No Tobacco Day 2025
The Ministry of Health, along with civil society organizations, development partners, and government agencies, is observing World No Tobacco Day 2025 under the theme "Unmasking the appeal: Exposing industry tactics on tobacco and nicotine products." The focus is on the tobacco and nicotine industry's manipulative strategies, particularly those targeting youth through flavored products, deceptive packaging, and aggressive digital marketing. The aim is to celebrate the progress made in tobacco control and to call for sustained collective action.
Progress in Reducing Tobacco Use
Kenya has made significant strides in reducing tobacco use through a comprehensive, multifaceted approach. According to the 2022 tobacco and drug abuse survey, adult tobacco use among those aged 15 to 65 has declined to 8.5%, a notable decrease from 11.6% in 2014. This reduction reflects the impact of sustained policy interventions, including higher tobacco taxes that have reduced affordability and consumption, especially among young people. Data also indicates a 15% drop in smoking initiation among adolescents since 2020, attributed to stricter regulations, public awareness campaigns, and the introduction of graphic health warnings. The tobaccofree farms initiative has played a crucial role by helping farmers in four counties transition to alternative livelihoods, thereby reducing tobacco supply chains.
Challenges and Persistent Issues
Despite the progress, challenges remain, with over 650,000 adolescents aged 10 to 17 having experimented with tobacco or nicotine products, according to 2024 data. The rising use of flavored nicotine pouches among university students underscores the need for continued vigilance. The ministry is addressing the rise of novel nicotine and tobacco products through a multi-agency response and is developing a national implementation strategy with costed interventions, enhanced regulations, and targeted risk communication.
Key Achievements in Tobacco Control
Over the past year, Kenya has achieved significant milestones in its fight against tobacco and substance use. These include strengthened tobacco control legislation through a comprehensive review of the 2007 Tobacco Control Act, with proposed amendments awaiting stakeholder validation. A landmark court of appeal ruling in December 2024 upheld the national shisha ban, reinforcing public health protection. Joint operations with enforcement agencies have resulted in the seizure of illicit nicotine pouches and other illegal tobacco products, with future raids planned in major towns and cities to strengthen compliance with the shisha ban.
Expanded Public Awareness and Health Initiatives
A nationwide public awareness campaign was conducted across all 47 counties from November 2024 to February 2025, supported by partners such as the International Institute of Legislative Affairs and the Kenya Tobacco Control Alliance. Seventeen new graphic health warnings were finalized and gazetted for tobacco product packaging, with implementation underway. The tobaccofree farms initiative has expanded in four tobacco-growing counties, supporting farmers in transitioning to sustainable agriculture. Prototype designs for integrated outpatient secession centers have been developed, with readiness assessments conducted in eight counties to establish a national secession program offering counseling services for recovering addicts.
Statistics on Tobacco Use
According to 2022 data, 8.5% of Kenyans use tobacco products. Shockingly, over 650,000 adolescents aged 10 to 17 have experimented with tobacco or nicotine products, as per 2024 data. The use of flavored nicotine pouches and e-cigarettes is rising among university students, according to NACADA data from 2024. Nearly 40% of adolescents are exposed to tobacco marketing via digital and social media.
Future Plans and Roadmap
The ministry's roadmap for the next year includes scaling up nationwide public awareness, sensitizing key stakeholders, and building the capacity of healthcare workers, including community health promoters. It also involves expanding cessation services to 10 additional counties and strengthening retail surveillance and compliance operations to eliminate illicit tobacco products. The integration of screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment into primary healthcare is a key proposal. Additional plans include building capacity for enforcement officers and community health promoters, operationalizing a national strategic plan with robust monitoring and evaluation, and concluding the ongoing amendments to the Tobacco Control Act of 2007.
Call to Action
The Ministry of Health urges all Kenyans, especially parents, youth, educators, and policymakers, to remain vigilant and united in combating tobacco and substance use. Together, the goal is to unmask the industry's harmful tactics and build a healthier, tobaccofree future for all.