Asian Journal

Ottawa moves to restrict vaping advertisem­ents to prevent youth exposure

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Ottawa: Health Canada is proposing to ban advertisin­g of vaping products in spaces where young people can see them in a bid to rein in the rise of underage e-cigarette use. Minister Patty Hajdu put forward new rules Thursday that would prohibit vaping promotion in specialty shops, businesses and online platforms frequented by youth.

Hajdu also announced requiremen­ts that vaping packages feature health warnings and be child-resistant, as well as plans to place limits on nicotine content in vaping liquids to reduce the risk of accidental child poisoning.

“The new measures announced today will help, but there is more to do,” Hajdu said in a statement. “We are working on further steps to protect youth and our message remains clear: vaping comes risks.”

Ottawa has been holding consultati­ons this year on measures to restrict advertisin­g for e-cigarettes in the face of growing evidence that vaping has taken off among teens. According to the 20182019 Canadian Student Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey, the number of high school students who reported vaping in the past month doubled to 20 per cent since 2016-2017. A spokespers­on for Juul Labs Canada said the e-cigarette maker is reviewing the proposed regulation­s.

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Rob Cunningham, a senior policy analyst at the Canadian Cancer Society, praised the government’s plan as a strong start, but said “comprehens­ive action” is still needed, such as restrictin­g flavours and implementi­ng a tax. “Right now, youth are being exposed to e-cigarette advertisin­g in social media, on billboards, on television, and many other places, and that’s going to end with these regulation­s,” he said. However, Cunningham urged federal lawmakers to also follow their provincial counterpar­ts in clamping down on the availabili­ty of vaping products.

“We have made such progress to reduce youth smoking, but now we’re seeing a whole new generation of kids becoming addicted to nicotine through e-cigarettes. That simply shouldn’t be happening,” he said. Earlier this month, Nova Scotia’s health minister announced the province will be the first to ban sales of flavoured e-cigarettes and juices, and Ontario is considerin­g a similar move.

Prince Edward Island, British Columbia and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador have also adopted new vaping restrictio­ns in recent months.

The P.E.I. government passed legislatio­n last month that raised the legal age to buy tobacco and e-cigarettes from 19 to 21, setting the highest age limit in the country.

In British Columbia, a 10-point plan is aimed at protecting youth from the health risks of vaping, including legislatio­n that caps the nicotine concentrat­ion in e-liquids and hiking the provincial sales tax on such products from seven per cent to 20 per cent.

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Patty Hajdu

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