India Research Center
The India Research Center, based in Mumbai, serves as a hub for Harvard Chan School’s research projects, educational programs, and knowledge translation and communication work across India.
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Roundtable II: “Advancing Tobacco and Alcohol Control in India: Evidence and the Next Steps”

The health risks associated with the use of tobacco, alcohol, or their concurrent use extend beyond individual morbidity, with significant implications for major public health priorities, including non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, and liver disorders. In addition, they intersect with a broader set of concerns, including mental health, injuries, domestic violence, poverty, and nutrition.
As highlighted in the first roundtable “Advancing Tobacco and Alcohol Control in India: Evidence and the Next Steps” held on August 4, 2025, these challenges are compounded by fragmented policy frameworks, gaps in surveillance systems, uneven access to cessation services, and persistent social norms that normalize consumption.
Recognising these challenges, the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health – India Research Center recently hosted the second roundtable in Mumbai on April 6, 2026, which marked a deliberate shift from problem identification to solution-oriented dialogue.
This convening brought together representatives from the National and State governments, research institutions and implementation partners. Their diverse perspectives and practical insights were instrumental in shaping a constructive dialogue, grounded in real-world challenges and opportunities for advancing tobacco and alcohol control in India.
The deliberations emphasized the importance of communication for behaviour change, strengthening institutional platforms for prevention and early intervention, health system strengthening, and coordinated governance. State experiences from Himachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Goa, and Haryana further demonstrated how implementation is shaped by local institutional capacity, social norms, regulatory environments, and community engagement.
Through shared commitment, evidence-based collaboration, and collective leadership, we look forward to moving closer to achieving a tobacco- and alcohol-free future.
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