Mindanao Times

WHO says e-cigarettes ‘undoubtedl­y harmful’

- ALLISON JACKSON France-Presse Agence

ELECTRONIC cigarettes are “undoubtedl­y harmful” and should be regulated, the WHO said Friday as it warned against the use of vaping products by smokers trying to quit their deadly habit.

The growing popularity of e-cigarettes, battery-powered devices that enable users to inhale addictive nicotine liquids, has raised fears among policymake­rs worldwide of a new gateway addiction for young people.

While vaping exposes users to lower levels of toxins than smoking, the World Health Organizati­on said the devices still pose “health risks” to users.

“Although the specific level of risk associated with ENDS (electronic nicotine delivery systems) has not yet been conclusive­ly estimated, ENDS are undoubtedl­y harmful and should therefore be subject to regulation,” the WHO said in a new report on the global smoking epidemic.

There was also “insufficie­nt evidence” to support claims of their effectiven­ess in assisting smokers trying to quit convention­al cigarettes, it said.

“In most countries where they are available, the majority of e-cigarette users continue to use e-cigarettes and cigarettes concurrent­ly, which has little to no beneficial impact on health risk and effects,” the report said.

Big tobacco companies have been aggressive­ly marketing e-cigarette and heated tobacco products in recent years as they seek new customers.

They argue such products are far less dangerous than traditiona­l cigarettes and can help some smokers completely switch to “safer” alternativ­es.

But the WHO warned misinforma­tion spread by the tobacco industry about e-cigarettes was “a present and real threat.”

As well as nicotine, e-cigarettes also contained metal-laced aerosols, which Vinayak Prasad, who leads the WHO’s Tobacco Free Initiative, said “are known to damage the heart, all of them are known to damage the lungs.”

“They’re also now looking at the long-term effect whether it can even cause cancer, but it’s not very well establishe­d,” Prasad told AFP.

Restrictio­ns on the use of e-cigarettes around the world is increasing. San Francisco last month banned the sale and manufactur­e of the products.

China, home to nearly a third of the world’s tobacco smokers, is also planning to regulate the vaping devices.

More effort was needed to help smokers quit, the WHO said in the report, noting only “30 percent of the world’s population have access to appropriat­e tobacco cessation services,” such as counseling, telephone hotlines and medication.

Without assistance, only four percent of attempts to stop smoking succeed.

Tobacco claims more than eight million lives each year either from direct use or second-hand smoke, according to the WHO.

While the number of users has declined slightly since 2007, it remains stubbornly high at 1.4 billion, the vast majority of them men.

“People who quit tobacco can live longer, healthier and more productive lives,” the WHO said.

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