The Citizen (Gauteng)

Relax vaping rules, urge lawmakers

REASONING: COULD HELP SMOKERS KICK THE HABIT

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Debate still rages about whether e-cigarettes represent a health risk.

Vaping rules should be relaxed to allow the promotion of e-cigarettes as tools to help tobacco smokers quit, British lawmakers said yesterday. This could include prescribin­g medically licensed e-cigarettes to assist smoking cessation efforts.

Vaping, or using e-cigarettes, is estimated to be 95% less harmful than smoking convention­al ones, according to the British parliament’s science and technology committee, which sees big health benefits if smokers can be encouraged to switch.

There is still fierce global debate as to whether e-cigarettes represent a health risk or a benefit, since their long-term effects are unclear.

A study this week, for example, found that e-cigarette vapour may cause adverse changes in lung cells.

But the British lawmakers concluded that the balance clearly favoured vaping over tobacco smoking and it urged greater regulatory leniency to allow advertisin­g of the relative benefits of e-cigarettes.

It also called for incentives to promote them as a less harmful option, in the form of lower levels of taxation, a relaxation of curbs on their use in public places and a review of approval systems for prescribin­g them as quit-smoking products.

“Concerns that e-cigarettes could be a gateway to convention­al smoking, including for young non-smokers, have not materialis­ed,” said committee chairman Norman Lamb. “If used correctly, e-cigarettes could be a key weapon in the National Health Service’s stop smoking arsenal.”

The charity Action on Smoking and Health said allowing e-cigarettes to be prescribed could be particular­ly important to people on low incomes and those with high levels of addiction.

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