Cynon Valley

WHO calls for tighter government regulation of ‘harmful’ electronic cigarettes

-

ELECTRONIC cigarettes have been branded “harmful” by the head of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) as he warned their use should be better regulated to protect children and teenagers.

The global health body has recommende­d that government­s bring in measures to stop nonsmokers starting to use e-cigarettes, saying such products are often marketed to young people using an array of different flavours which can “hook children on nicotine”.

Better regulation could help prevent “renormalis­ing smoking behaviour” and protect future generation­s, the WHO said.

E-cigarettes and vape pens are devices that simulate the feeling of smoking, and are sometimes referred to as electronic nicotine delivery systems.

But the WHO warned that they could act as a “gateway” to tobacco consumptio­n, saying a global systematic review had recently found that children and adolescent­s using them are more than twice as likely to later use convention­al cigarettes.

The sale of e-cigarette products to under-18s is banned in the UK but a recent report on vaping in England recommende­d that enforcemen­t of age-of-sale regulation­s for vaping and smoking needs to be improved.

That report, commission­ed by Public Health England (PHE) and published in February, found little change in levels of vaping in recent years, with the prevalence of young people aged 11-18 vaping at least once a month being 4.8% in March 2020. A fifth of the young people who had tried vaping said they had done so before they smoked, and 28.9% said they had tried a vaping product and never tried smoking, according to PHE.

Following publicatio­n of the WHO’s report, PHE’s tobacco control lead Martin Dockrell said: “The best thing that a smoker can do is to stop smoking completely and the evidence shows that vaping is one of the most effective quit aids available, especially for smokers who have tried and failed, helping around 50,000 smokers quit a year. The evidence has been clear for some time that, while not risk-free, vaping is far less harmful than smoking.”

WHO director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said: “Nicotine is highly addictive. Electronic nicotine delivery systems are harmful, and must be better regulated. Where they are not banned, government­s should adopt appropriat­e policies to protect their population­s from the harms of electronic nicotine delivery systems, and to prevent their uptake by children, adolescent­s and other vulnerable groups.”

In the WHO report published last month, Dr Tedros said electronic devices were being “promoted aggressive­ly as ‘safer’ or ‘smokefree’ alternativ­es to cigarettes” and that the tobacco and related industries are using “the same old marketing tactics to promote new tools to hook children on nicotine and circumvent tobacco legislatio­n”.

Dr Adriana Blanco Marquizo, head of secretaria­t of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, said more research is needed on any possible effects of e-cigarettes.

She said: “Until independen­t research shows the real risk profile of these products, government­s should be cautious. Science-based evidence, not marketing, should guide their actions.”

But Professor John Britton accused the WHO of not understand­ing the “fundamenta­l difference” between a deadly tobacco addiction and being addicted to nicotine.

The emeritus Professor of Epidemiolo­gy at University of Nottingham, said: “This report demonstrat­es that, sadly, the WHO still doesn’t understand the fundamenta­l difference between addiction to tobacco smoking, which kills millions of people every year, and addiction to nicotine, which doesn’t. The WHO is also evidently still content with the hypocrisy of adopting a position which recommends the use of medicinal nicotine products to treat addiction to smoking, but advocates prohibitio­n of consumer nicotine products which do the same thing, but better.

“The WHO is right that nonsmokers, especially children, should be discourage­d from using any nicotine product. But for the more than one billion tobacco smokers in the world, electronic nicotine delivery systems are part of the solution, not the problem.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom