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HEALTH

Norwegian government proposes increased financial support for kids’ glasses

Parents will be able to claim more financial support when purchasing childrens' glasses in Norway under a recently announced government proposal.

A child taking an eye test.
The government has proposed increasing the support scheme for children's' glasses. Pictured is a girl taking an eye test. Photo by nrd on Unsplash.

Norway’s government has announced a proposal that will see parents offered more financial support when they purchase prescription glasses for children. 

“The glasses support scheme will give children and families who need it help to get good glasses,” Minister of Labour and Social Inclusion, Marte Mjøs Persen, said in an announcement.

The previous support scheme was rolled back by the last government in 2020. However, the current government pledged to introduce a new support scheme when it was elected last year. 

Up to 140,000 children could benefit from the revised scheme, the government has said. 

Under the scheme, families could be reimbursed up to 75 percent of the cost of a pair of prescription lenses for a child. There will be five different rates, with the support depending on the strength of the glasses bought. 

Those who apply for the support will have the money then paid into their account to help pay for the costs before purchase or as a reimbursement after the spectacles have been bought. Parents will need to apply to NAV for support. 

Once the scheme leaves consultation, the government hopes to have it in place by the beginning of August. 

Kids under 18 will be eligible. However, those who just need reading glasses will be excluded from the scheme. 

The bill is expected to pass through parliament as even though the current government is a minority one, it will have support from the Socialist Left Party (SV) for the scheme. 

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HEALTH

Norwegian convenience stores to phase out sales of cigarettes 

Two of Norway’s most well-known convenience store chains, Narvesen and 7-Eleven, will stub out the sale of cigarettes in the long term. 

Norwegian convenience stores to phase out sales of cigarettes 

Reitan Convenience Norway, the company that owns the two chains, is set to phase out cigarette sales and ultimately stop selling them, business news publication E24 reports. 

“We already see a declining demand for cigarettes and want to contribute to phasing this out in the long term,” Anniken Staubo at Reitan Convenience Norway told the paper. 

The announcement came after sister company Reitan Convenience Sweden said that it would also stop selling cigarettes. The Norwegian arm of the business said cigarette sales would be phased out by 2026. 

“Just like Reitan Convenience Sweden, we are also not going to take in new products and brands in this category from 2026,” Staubo said. 

Staubo added that the vision to phase out cigarettes was part of the company’s overall sustainability strategy. 

“There are major environmental and social sustainability challenges in the production of tobacco. We plan for a gradual phasing out of cigarettes in our range and follow the development of any new changes in rules and laws,” Staubo said. 

The UK and New Zealand have both spoken of introducing laws to ban young people from buying tobacco.

Norgesgruppen, which owns Norway’s other prominent convenience store chain, Joker, has said it had no concrete plans to phase out the sale of cigarettes.

Since 2017, the number of young people who smoke daily in Norway has fallen, while there has been a steady increase in the number of people using snus. 

Figures from the national data agency, Statistics Norway, show that in 2023 the proportion of people who used snus daily was 16 percent, compared to just 7 percent of people aged between 16 and 74 who smoked cigarettes every day. 

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