Sligo Weekender

HSE welcomes ban on sale of nicotine inhaling products to children

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THE HSE has welcomed the introducti­on of legislatio­n banning the sale of nicotine inhaling products to children. The HSE National Environmen­tal Health Service will enforce this legislatio­n. Environmen­tal Health Officers in each county will carry out a test purchase programme in retailers of nicotine inhaling products to test the market for the sale of these products to minors.

Dr Maurice Mulcahy, Regional Chief Environmen­tal Health Officer, HSE, said: “Where retailers sell tobacco products to minors, they are prosecuted through the District Court. In 2023, the

National Environmen­tal Health Service successful­ly prosecuted 28 retailers for selling tobacco products to minors.

“With the introducti­on of this new legislatio­n, the test purchase programme will now include retailers of electronic cigarettes/ vapes to monitor the sale of these products to those under 18 years.

“We are calling on retailers to familiaris­e themselves with the law and put in place adequate controls so they ask for proof of age such as an age card, passport or a driving licence so they may avoid committing an offence and prevent children from accessing such products.

“If you wish to make a complaint regards a premises selling electronic cigarettes/vapes to minors please contact your local Environmen­tal Health Office, details of which are available on the HSE website www.hse.ie/eng/ services/list/1/environ/ contact.html.”

Responding to the legislatio­n, Dr Paul Kavanagh, Consultant in Public Health Medicine HSE Tobacco Free Ireland Programme, said: “The enactment of the Tobacco Products and Nicotine Inhaling Products Act 2023 is an important step forward for public health in Ireland. It is especially welcome that the Minister has immediatel­y commenced provisions prohibitin­g the sale of electronic cigarettes to people under 18 years. The use of e-cigarettes has risen quickly among children and young people who are especially vulnerable to the harms, especially nicotine addiction and lung injury. Prohibitio­n on product sales to people under 18 years is a fundamenta­l cornerston­e of a much-needed regulatory framework to better protect the health and safety of children and young people from e-cigarette related harms. Existing provisions prohibitin­g sales of convention­al cigarettes, which are currently overseen by the HSE Environmen­tal Health Service, have been instrument­al in reducing smoking among children and young people in Ireland. We can expect these new measures, especially when fully supported by the retail licensing system provided for under the Tobacco Products and Nicotine Inhaling Products Act 2023, will help address rising e-cigarette use among children and young people. In anticipati­on of these new measures, the HSE Tobacco Free Ireland Programme has already shared resources with schools and parents/guardians to support them in building an environmen­t where children and young people are protected from e-cigarette harms. It is welcome that the Minister is also consulting on wider measures to protect children and young people including flavours, packaging and, point-of-sale advertisin­g, all of which are well-establishe­d tactics from the tobacco industry playbook that were cynically used to promote convention­al cigarettes.”

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