The Sunday Telegraph

Vaping caution urged by cancer survivor MP

- By Lewis Pennock

E-CIGARETTES are “not necessaril­y harmless”, James Brokenshir­e, the Cabinet minister who survived cancer, has warned amid calls for relaxed rules around their use.

The Housing Secretary urged caution over the unknown long-term impacts of vaping after a parliament­ary committee backed less regulation of ecigarette­s. Mr Brokenshir­e, 50, was diagnosed with lung cancer in December last year before he underwent lifethreat­ening surgery in January to remove a third of his right lung.

The MP for Bexley, a non-smoker, said it was important to “see how the evidence works” after calls by the science and technology committee to relax rules around how vaping products are licensed, prescribed and advertised.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Any Questions? programme: “If vaping can help people quit smoking, absolutely, that’s a really important part of what we need to do to change the approach and change people’s lifestyles in some way.

“But I just want to be cautious about what the long-term impacts of this are and how... it is less harmful, but it’s not necessaril­y harmless.” The committee released its report this week but some of its members were criticised over their links to the vaping industry. It emerged that Norman Lamb, the chairman and former health minister, spoke at the UK Vaping Industry Associatio­n’s conference in April before inviting the group to address the committee.

Mr Brokenshir­e said: “Whilst I do understand the public health desire to get more people to stop smoking, how this may be a route to do so, I think we need to be cautious about the issue of

‘I think we need to be cautious about the issue of substituti­ons and see how the evidence works through’

substituti­ons and see how the evidence works through.”

Mr Lamb, who also appeared on the programme, said the committee looked at a “wealth of evidence” from organisati­ons including Cancer Research UK, the British Heart Foundation and British Medical Council.

He said: “They were all, and many more of them, saying very clearly, that on the evidence we have, vaping is significan­tly less harmful than smoking.”

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