Daily Mail

IN MY VIEW... VAPE SHOPS DON’T BELONG IN HOSPITALS

-

WHEN I read earlier this month that vape stores have been opened in NHS hospitals, I wondered if my eyes were deceiving me.

Vapes — or e-cigarettes — are battery-powered devices that heat a typically sweet-flavoured liquid containing nicotine to create a vapour.

Walk down any High Street in the country and chances are you will walk through the fug of someone’s vape cloud at some point.

But in hospitals? The rationale is that it offers an alternativ­e to smoking tobacco, helping those addicted to cigarettes to cut down or quit.

I oppose the move because, at present, I don’t think we have enough evidence that inhaling nicotine — and chemical flavouring­s — does not have adverse effects over the long term, even though we do know vaping is safer than smoking tobacco in the short term.

As well as chemical flavouring­s (there are literally thousands of them) constituen­ts found in e-cigarettes include lead, nickel, tin, and arsenic.

There remains uncertaint­y, too, about whether e-cigarettes will in fact help tobacco users stop smoking — and concerns about whether vaping is actually a potential gateway to tobacco use.

The danger of children in particular becoming addicted to nicotine is such that the city of San Francisco last month banned the sale of e-cigarettes in stores and online.

That move might be considered premature, even draconian, possibly pushing ex- tobacco smokers back to cigarettes, but it does highlight the worries of profession­als elsewhere.

Hospitals should uphold the highest standards of healthcare promotion. After all, they are where we go to improve our health.

In my view, allowing vape shops on site when we don’t have all the informatio­n we need is a deeply worrying step — and gives both visitors and patients the wrong message.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom