Country
Qatar
Qatar has made progress on tobacco control in recent years. However, people continue to die and become sick needlessly, and the costs to society from tobacco use continue to mount. Qatar can still do more to make the proven tobacco control tools work for its citizens’ wellbeing.
Issues
Tobacco harms the health, the treasury, and the spirit of Qatar. Every year, more than 312 of its people are killed by tobacco-caused disease. Still, more than 760 children (10-14 years old) and 262720 adults (15+ years old) continue to use tobacco each day. Complacency in the face of the tobacco epidemic insulates the tobacco industry in Qatar and ensures that tobacco's death toll will grow every year. Tobacco control advocates must reach out to other communities and resources to strengthen their efforts and create change.
Smoking Deaths

Adult Smoking (15+ Y.O.)
using tobacco daily: 2015
18.2%
Even though fewer men smoke on average in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, there are still more than 262200 men who smoke cigarettes each day, making it an ongoing and dire public health threat.
Children Smoking(10–14 Y.O.)
% using tobacco daily: 2015
1.09%
Even though fewer boys smoke in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, there are still more than 600 boys who smoke cigarettes each day, making it an ongoing and dire public health threat.

Deaths
% caused by tobacco: 2016
9.49%
Even though fewer men die from tobacco in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, tobacco still kills 5 men every week, necessitating action from policymakers.

Adult Smoking (15+ Y.O.)
% using tobacco daily: 2015
0.1%
Even though fewer women smoke in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, there are still more than 400 women who smoke cigarettes each day, making it an ongoing and dire public health threat.
Children Smoking (10–14 Y.O.)
% using tobacco daily: 2015
0.29%
Even though fewer girls smoke in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, there are still more than 100 girls who smoke cigarettes each day, making it sign of an ongoing and dire public health threat.

Deaths
% caused by tobacco: 2016
3.9%
Even though fewer women die from tobacco in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, tobacco still kills 32 women every year, necessitating action from policymakers.
Smokeless Tobacco
% using tobacco daily: 2013
1%
Even though fewer people use smokeless tobacco on average in Qatar than on average in very high-HDI countries, 28800 people still currently use smokeless tobacco, indicating an ongoing public health challenge, including heightened levels of oral cancers.
Societal Harms
The economic cost of smoking in Qatar amounts to 801 million riyal. This includes direct costs related to healthcare expenditures and indirect costs related to lost productivity due to early mortality and morbidity.
Tobacco Use Also...
Harms Development
Buying tobacco robs families of the resources they may need to rise out of poverty. A smoker in Qatar would have to spend 0.71% of their average income (measured by per capita GDP) to purchase 10 of the most popular cigarettes to smoke daily each year!
Harms Development

Harms Environment
Cigarette butts are the most commonly discarded pieces of waste worldwide. It is estimated that 927 tonnes of butts and packs wind up as toxic trash in Qatar each year. This is roughly equivalent to the weight of 185 endangered African elephants.
Harms Environment

Harms Equality
To appeal to more customers, the tobacco industry markets its products aggressively to women and children.
Harms Equality

Harms NCDs
People living with mental illness are nearly twice as likely to smoke as other individuals.
Harms NCDs

Industry
n/a
Growing
n/a
Production
n/a
Solutions
Current Policy in Qatar
Protect from Smoke
All public places completely smoke-free is the best practice
Smokefree
n/a
HealthCare Facilities
n/a
Educational Facilities
n/a
Universities
n/a
Government Facilities
n/a
Indoor Offices
n/a
Restaurants
n/a
Pubs and Bars
n/a
Public Transport
n/a
All Other Indoor Public Places
n/a
Funds for Smokefree Enforcement
Offer Help
National quit line and both NRT and cessation-services cost-covered is the best practice
Warn About the Dangers to Tobacco Users on Product Packaging
A plain, standardized pack with a large health warning is the best practice

Warn About the Dangers to the Whole Population in a Media Campaign


Enforce Bans on Advertising
Ban on all forms of direct and indirect advertising is the best practice
Number of Direct Ad Bans
7/7
possible bans
Number of Indirect Ad Bans
9/10
possible bans
Ad Ban Compliance Percent
High
Direct Bans
- National TV and radio
- International TV and radio
- Local magazines and newspapers
- International magazines and newspapers
- Billboard and outdoor advertising
- Advertising at point of sale
- Advertising on internet
Indirect Bans
- Free distribution in mail or through other means
- Promotional discounts
- Non-tobacco products identified with tobacco brand names
- Brand name of non-tobacco products used for tobacco product
- Appearance in TV and/or films: tobacco brands (product placement)
- Appearance in TV and/or films: tobacco products
- Prescribed anti-tobacco ads required for any visual entertainment media product that depicts tobacco products, use or images
- Complete ban on sponsorship
- Any form of contribution (financial or other support) to any event, activity or individual
- Ban on the publicity of financial or other sponsorship or support by the tobacco industry of events, activities, individuals
Raise Taxes
Excise Tax as a % of Cigarette Price
WHO Benchmark
Minimum 70%
of Retail Price is Excise Tax
Qatar
0%
of Retail Price is Excise Tax
