A staggering 44 percent of local authorities do not offer smokers a specialist smoking cessation service, a report from Action on Health and Smoking (ASH) and Cancer Research UK has found.



The report, ‘A Changing Landscape: Stop smoking services and tobacco control in England,’ found that between 2014/15 and 2017/18 total spending by local authorities on stop smoking services and wider tobacco control dropped by £41.3 million; a 30 percent decrease.

Government cuts to public health budgets were found to be the biggest contributor to this decline, with local authorities responding by cutting back on their own support for smokers.

Unsurprisingly, the report found that councils who retained a specialist stop smoking service had higher quit rates in their area, compared to those who had no service in place.

In a press release, Hazel Cheeseman, director of policy for ASH, said:

“Local authorities are having to make the best of a butchered public health budget and many are managing to do just that. But councils need to avoid a race to the bottom and ensure they maintain investment in stop smoking support and the other activities that will reduce smoking and tackle inequalities – this necessarily requires sustainable funding from central government.”

A Changing Landscape calls for government to reverse cuts to the Public Health Grant and for local authorities to implement stop smoking services that support smokers.

Kruti Shrotri, cancer prevention policy manager at Cancer Research UK, said: