The Phnom Penh Post

CSOs: Vaping vendors market to kids

- Chea Sokny

TWO civil society organisati­ons (CSOs) working in the fields of child and youth health urged authoritie­s to take further measures against the ecigarette or vaping trade.

The Cambodia Movement for Health (CMH) and the Non-Communicab­le Diseases (NCD) Alliance made the call in a September 27 joint statement, warning that ecigarette manufactur­ers and vendors were actively targeting the youth market.

The press release claimed that e-cigarette makers had developed flavours aimed at attracting younger customers.

“E-cigarettes contain nicotine. If young people and children use them, it can cause serious harm to their lungs, hearts and especially their brains. They are often misleading­ly advertised as a means to quit smoking cigarettes,” it added.

CMH executive director Mom Kong said both e-cigarettes and regular cigarettes were tobacco products that endanger health. The main difference appeared to be that e-cigarettes were smokeless and aimed at younger consumers, he added.

“Young adults and children who use e-cigarettes are consuming nicotine, which will affect their developing brains,” he said.

“Authoritie­s at all levels should take the strictest legal action possible against those who advertisea­ndsellthes­eproducts,in order to prevent the youth from becoming addicted,” he added.

Mom Kong said that while the government has prohibited imports and prevented the use of e-cigarettes, they were still widely available online.

An NCD Alliance official, who asked not to be named, said he had observed traders selling e-cigarettes online despite the prohibitio­n of such sales.

“We know that they are circulatin­g widely through online markets, but we have not seen action from the authoritie­s,” he said.

According to the US Centre for Disease Control (CDC), from August 2019 to February 2020, a total of 2,807 in the US alone had fallen ill and 68 had died from lung disease caused by smoking e-cigarettes.

The Cambodian government ordered a nationwide crackdown on the products in June, with thousands of products being seized from thousands of locations.

However, the civil society organisati­ons claimed that vendors had found ways to reintroduc­e them to the market, primarily by selling them online.

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