Scottish Daily Mail

Holy smoke! Now 4.3m Britons are using e-cigarettes

- By Ella Pickover

VAPING has reached record levels in Britain with an estimated 4.3million people now puffing on electronic devices, according to a report.

The data suggests that 8.3 per cent of adults in Scotland, England and Wales vape.

Just ten years ago this figure was 1.7 per cent – equating to around 800,000 people.

The charity Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), which complied the report, said a ‘vaping revolution’ had taken place over the past decade.

Of the 4.3million current vapers, around 2.4million are ex-smokers, 1.5million are current smokers and 350,000 have never smoked a cigarette.

The figures also show that the proportion of current e-cigarette users who have never smoked has increased from 4.9 per cent last year to 8.1 per cent this year.

The authors of the report said this figure was an ‘all-time high’.

In 2022, 35 per cent of current vapers also smoked – these people are some

‘We need a plan that will help all smokers’

times referred to as ‘dual users’. But among this group, those who vape daily smoke fewer cigarettes than dual users who vape less frequently.

The report, based on a YouGov survey of more than 13,000 adults from across Great Britain, found that 28 per cent of current smokers had never tried an e-cigarette, with 10 per cent of this group saying they were ‘concerned e-cigarettes are not safe enough’.

A third of adults in the survey said they believe that vaping is more, or equally as harmful, as smoking.

One in five former smokers said they used vaping to help them quit.

But more than half (56 per cent) of current vapers who are ex-smokers said they had been vaping for more than three years.

Vapers reported the main reason they used e-cigarettes was for quitting smoking and to prevent them from returning to smoking, while 14 per cent said they used vapes ‘because they enjoy it’.

Most vapers reported using refillable tank systems but the report points to a rise in disposable e-cigarettes – up from 2.3 per cent of vapers using these in 2021 to 15 per cent this year. The authors suggested that younger adults are driving the increase in the use of disposable vapes, with 48 per cent of 18 to 24-year-old vapers using this type of device.

They found the most popular flavours were fruit, followed by menthol.

‘Over the last decade we’ve seen a vaping revolution take hold,’ said Hazel Cheeseman, deputy chief executive of ASH.

‘There are now five times as many vapers as there were in 2012, with millions having used them as part of a quit attempt.

‘However, they haven’t worked for everyone. Just under half of smokers who have tried them have stopped using them and 28 per cent have never tried one at all.

‘Government has said that a “vaping revolution” will help them meet their ambition for a smoke-free country by 2030 but it won’t be enough – we need a comprehens­ive plan that will help all smokers.’

Earlier this year, a separate report from ASH concluded that the proportion of children vaping is on the rise, with many being influenced by social media sites such as TikTok.

While it is illegal to sell vapes to under-18s, the proportion of children aged 11 to 17 currently vaping has jumped from 4 per cent in 2020 to 7 per cent in 2022.

Ash started its annual survey, Smokefree GB, in 2010.

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Vaping boom: Number using the devices have soared in recent years

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