Bangkok Post

Chaiwut ups vape campaign

- AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H

Digital Economy and Society Minister Chaiwut Thanakaman­usorn said yesterday he would push on with efforts to legalise e-cigarettes, despite the health risks critics say they pose.

Mr Chaiwut confirmed his position at a meeting with people campaignin­g for the legalisati­on of vapes and the like at his ministry.

Mr Chaiwut said legalising e-cigarettes would enable the country to tax their sales and would provide a safer option for those unable to quit smoking regular cigarettes.

He said he will form a working group to study the matter and invite people to sign in support of a request next month that the Constituti­onal Court should rule on whether banning imports of e-cigarettes violates the rights of the public, especially their right to enjoy access to less harmful products.

This would be followed by forums and seminars to expand public knowledge about e-cigarettes, Mr Chaiwut said. The minister said he had no vested interest in legalising vaping.

E-cigarettes have been banned in Thailand since 2014 but interest groups, including tobacco companies, are lobbying the government to lift the ban.

Meanwhile, Roengrudee Patanavani­ch, lecturer of the Community Medicine Department at the Faculty of Medicine Ramathibod­i Hospital, Mahidol University, cited the UK medical journal Thorax which claimed that inhaling secondhand smoke from an e-cigarette can increase the risk of developing chronic lung diseases and, in the majority of cases, shortness of breath.

She said the informatio­n was based on a five-year research undertakin­g that was conducted among high school students who shared the same house with e-cigarette smokers from 2014-2019. It found that bystanders have a higher tendency to suffer respirator­y diseases, Dr Roengrudee said.

Dr Prakit Vathesatog­kit, president of the Action on Smoking and Health Foundation, referred to previous media reports about a Thai celebrity who was admitted to hospital after suffering bronchitis from inhaling the smoke of an e-cigarette. Due to a lack of clear informatio­n, many people doubted the danger e-cigarettes posed until this research came out, Dr Prakit said, adding that legalising e-cigarettes would cause other health problems to spike in the future.

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