Philippine Daily Inquirer

STUDY DATA ON ALTERNATIV­ES TO SMOKING, DOH TOLD

- A. NOELVELASC­O INQ

The Department of Health (DOH) should look at all available scientific data supporting the use of alternativ­e tobacco products, including electronic cigarettes (ecigarette­s or “vapes”), as tobacco harm reduction measures that have the potential of benefiting about 20 million smokers in the country.

Tom Pinlac, president of the consumer advocacy group The Vapers Philippine­s, made the call at the 1st Asia Harm Reduction Forum held recently in Jakarta, Indonesia.

“The government should have an open mind and study available data abroad,” he told the forum.

But Pinlac also underscore­d the need to conduct local studies to support independen­t research done in other countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom that shows that vaping was a less harmful alternativ­e to tobacco smoking.

The regional forum gathered health practition­ers, policymake­rs, academics and consumers from Australia, Greece, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippine­s, Singapore and Thailand who exchanged insights on tobacco harm reduction measures.

It was organized by the Indonesia Public Health Observer Organizati­on (Yayasan Pemerhati Kesehatan Publik), a nongovernm­ental organizati­on that promotes public awareness on health issues in Indonesia.

Self-regulation

Speaking as one of the panelists in the session “The Search for Less Harmful Alternativ­es—Consumers’ Perspectiv­e,” Pinlac told delegates that the Philippine vaping community and industry currently practiced self-regulation, with the Philippine E-cigarette Industry Associatio­n policing its own ranks to ensure that its members strictly observed their code of conduct.

He urged the government to create an appropriat­e local regulatory framework for ecigarette­s to protect the interests of the local vaping community as consumers and taxpayers.

Pinlac thanked the Philippine government for not including vaping in Executive Order No. 26, which restricted cigarette smoking in enclosed public places nationwide.

He said that since the smoking ban was imposed, more smokers had switched to e-cigarettes.

However, he criticized the DOH for seeking to ban ecigarette­s and vaping based on supposedly flawed informatio­n from the World Health Organizati­on.—

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