China Daily (Hong Kong)

Claims vaping is alternativ­e to smoking pernicious health risk

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THE HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRA­TIVE REGION has banned the smoking of electronic cigarettes in public areas. Guangming Daily comments:

E-cigarette promoters claim that the “high-tech” gadgets do not contain tar or produce particulat­e matter, as if smoking e-cigarettes does no harm to health. And many people, including nonsmokers, buy the idea. Some smokers even use e-cigarettes as an aid to give up smoking.

In fact, plenty of studies have proved that e-cigarettes are no different from traditiona­l cigarettes when it comes to pernicious­ness, as both contain nicotine, the addictive and noxious chemical that develops smokers’ dependence on tobacco.

The main components of e-cigarettes include nicotine, synthetic perfumes and volatile compounds, most of which are harmful to health. Inhaling such a noxious mix is not only addictive but dangerous.

But few advertisem­ents for e-cigarettes point out these potential dangers. In other words, only depicting them as a more healthy substitute for

convention­al cigarettes is itself pernicious.

The World Health Organizati­on has organized special research into the effects of e-cigarette and concluded that they harm public health. It has called for them to be strictly controlled and for nonsmokers, particular­ly adolescent­s, to be protected from the negative influence of e-cigarettes.

There are still not specific national standards for the production and selling of e-cigarettes. The market supervisor­y and administra­tive authoritie­s in China banned selling e-cigarettes to juveniles in August. China has more than 300 million smokers, and about 750 million second-hand smokers. It is estimated that diseases caused by smoking is responsibl­e for at least 1 million deaths in the country each year.

Now is the time for e-cigarettes to be put in their cross hairs of the national anti-smoking efforts.

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