Weekend Herald

Vaping concerns are more than puffery

It’s little surprise the practice [of vaping] holds some attraction for children, just as cigarette smoking impressed earlier generation­s.

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Few would have failed to notice the rise and rise of the practice of vaping.

Most shopping precincts now have specialist stores selling the utensils and oils, under such names as Shosha, the Vape Shed and Vapourium. These have sprung up with alacrity after the first imports of the product began disseminat­ing around main New Zealand cities just over five years ago.

While vaping has credible claims to being 95 per cent safer than cigarettes, it still has the option of delivering nicotine to the system; is not harmless; and is habit forming.

It’s little surprise the practice holds some attraction for children, just as cigarette smoking impressed earlier generation­s.

An ASH Year 10 survey, which questions 20,000 to 30,000 students every year about smoking, found an increase in the proportion of children experiment­ing with vaping, from about one in five in 2014 to one in three in 2018. School principals mirrored that finding this week,

estimating at least a third of secondary students have tried vaping.

Likely fearing overly restrictiv­e measures from authoritie­s, vape vendors have been keen to be seen as responsibl­y regulating themselves, voluntaril­y enforcing 18+ age restrictio­ns on sales.

The Vaping Trade Associatio­n, which represents businesses in the vape trade, says it has also been asking for official regulation­s for more than five years.

This week, finally, Prime Minister

Jacinda Ardern announced government regulation­s on vaping will be presented “soon”. Given the healthiest option is not to vape or smoke, preventing entry to either practice is crucial — and needed now.

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