DOH Quitline is a support service for smokers and e-cigarette users or vapers who are ready to stop the habit. he added.
Service delivery is through toll-free number 1558 . Services are free, confidential, and accessible nationwide. DOH Quitline and mCessation are support services for smokers who are ready to quit smoking. It is a collaboration among WHO, DOH and Lung Center of the Philippines. They were established to bring down the number of smokers through telephone counselling and mobile messaging. It gets its
mandate from the Republic Act 9211 (The Philippine Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003) and Executive Order 26 ( Nationwide Ban of Smoking in Public Places). Both regulatory Acts to protect the public from the harmful effects of smoking, provide quality air and promote healthy living. They were launched to the public on June 19, 2017. According to the reports of the World Health Organization and the Department of Health, smoking is now the leading cause of non-communicable diseases like lung cancer, COPD and other chronic respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. These illnesses will eventually lead to premature death. The trend will continue unless tobacco users quit now. The Department of Health (DOH), in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO), launched phone and mobile-centered support services to help Filipino smokers quit tobacco on June 19, 2017. Harnessing the power and potentials of communication technologies, the DOH now offers Filipinos who want to kick their smoking habits real-time counseling and support through the phone and social media. Quitline 1558 is a toll-free number accessible anytime and anywhere in the Philippines. For the chat-based cessation service, simply visit the mReady2Quit FB page. Services will be available and accessible via SMART/Sun Cellular and Globe. “We are all pleased to share with the public new services that will help them initiate or continue quitting the use of tobacco products,” Health Secretary Paulyn Jean B. Rosell-Ubial said. “The ubiquitous availability and reach of telecommunication devices have already enabled numerous possibilities. From effectively bridging the communication gap between people, these devices are now also seen as valuable tools in improving health care delivery systems to address the burden of tobacco use,” she added. Based on the country’s 2015 Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS), seven in 10 of Filipino smokers would like to quit tobacco. But only 4% of those who smoked in the past 12 months reported success in fully kicking the deadly habit. "The Philippines is once again at the forefront of tobacco control innovation as the first country to launch a mobile tobacco cessation initiative in the Western Pacific Region," WHO Country Representative to the Philippines Dr. Gundo Weiler said. "With the Quitlines, Filipino smokers now have on their hands an accessible way to put into action their intention to quit smoking. The World Health Organization is proud to support this initiative together with the Department of Health and the International Telecommunications Union." Non-communicable diseases-NCDs (cancer, heart disease, diabetes, respiratory diseases) are threat to the Western Pacific Region, to which the Philippines belongs. In 2012 alone, approximately 11 million deaths in the region were due to NCDs, undermining economic development. There are now 1 million less smokers in the Philippines (GATS, 2015), and there is real demand for smoking cessation services as tobacco control programs are strengthened: graphic health warnings are prompting smokers to quit; significant number of local governments are enforcing better smoke-free ordinances and more recently, the President has just signed EO 26 banning smoking in public places nationwide. The Philippines was the logical pilot for the WHO-ITU partnership, ‘Be He@lthy, Be Mobile’ (BHBM) because of the high penetration of mobile telephone in the country. “Cellphone penetration rate in the Philippines was 113% as far back as 2012. Mobile phones provide a reliable and cheap tool to access even the remotest of populations. The Philippines is a highly digitized society with a rapidly growing mobile phone penetration, and it made sense to roll out the mobile cessation here," Secretary Ubial emphasized. The mobile cessation component of DOH’s real-time support services was developed under the the BHBM Initiative. BHBM is a larger movement that looks to exploit to incorporate mobile technology – in particular text messaging and apps – to help combat non-communicable diseases or NCDs. So far nine countries have joined the initiative: Costa Rica, Norway, Philippines, Senegal, Tunisia, United Kingdom, Zambia, India and Egypt. World Health Organization’s (WHO) document on Policy Recommendations for Smoking Cessation and Treatment of Tobacco Dependence says it is difficult to reduce the tobacco-related deaths over the next 30-50 years unless adult smokers are actively encouraged to quit. Both Quitline technologies implement a range of techniques in their communication and messages, including motivation, advice and guidance, and counseling, over telephone and mobile platforms.
18/05/2026
Ni****ne pouches, flavoured and appealing, are designed to hook young people. And these products evolve rapidly.
WHO is calling on governments to regulate them now.
Read WHO’s Global Ni****ne Pouch Report 👉 bit.ly/4nymmbk ***coExposed
18/05/2026
Companies are targeting young people with ni****ne pouches.
Different marketing tactics.
Same goal: a lifetime of addiction.
The truth is that only 26 countries currently restrict the sale of ni****ne pouches to minors.
Know the tactics. Protect your health. ***coExposed
12/05/2026
Wag magpadala sa maling akala at impormasyon.
Don’t be fooled by the name.
“V**e” isn’t harmless water v***r, it’s a marketing illusion. What e-cigarettes actually release is aerosol packed with harmful substances: ni****ne that hooks you, formaldehyde linked to cancer, toxic metals like lead and nickel, and chemicals that irritate your lungs.
This isn’t harmless. This is harm repackaged.
**ng ****ne ***coDay
10/05/2026
08/05/2026
29/04/2026
Public health should always come first.
Not profits. Not industry interests. Not marketing tactics. Protect people, not products.
Smoking affects the heart long before symptoms appear. Each cigarette delivers chemicals that enter the bloodstream within seconds, reaching the heart and blood vessels almost immediately. These substances damage the inner lining of arteries, making them more vulnerable to cholesterol buildup. Over time, this accelerates plaque formation, narrowing blood vessels and reducing the flow of oxygen rich blood to the heart muscle.
Smoking also changes the chemistry of the blood itself. It increases clotting tendency by thickening blood and activating platelets, raising the risk of heart attacks and strokes. At the same time, smoking lowers protective high density cholesterol and promotes inflammation throughout the cardiovascular system. These effects are not limited to heavy smokers. Even occasional smoking can trigger vessel constriction and sudden spikes in blood pressure that strain the heart.
Repeated exposure causes permanent structural damage. Blood vessels lose elasticity, making it harder for them to respond to changing demands. The heart muscle must work harder to pump against this resistance, which over time weakens its function. These combined processes explain why smoking remains one of the strongest and most preventable drivers of cardiovascular disease.
15/04/2026
Va**ng is HARMFUL. Let us not sacrifice the future of our young generations by neglecting what we have done now. Total ban on v**e manufacturing, marketing, and selling in any form.