The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

‘Allow e-cigs’ WHO to tell government­s

- by Dave Lord

PUBLIC HEALTH specialist­s in the UK have urged the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) not to “control and suppress” e-cigarettes as it prepares to publish global guidelines on the devices.

A letter signed by more than 50 researcher­s and specialist­s said e-cigarettes have the potential to save millions of lives.

Iturged the WHO not to impose regulation­s on the devices in the same way it does with tobacco cigarettes.

The global health advisor is to publish recommenda­tions about e-cigarettes to government­s later this year.

The letter, seen by the BBC, said: “These products could be among the most significan­t health innovation­s of the 21st Century — perhaps saving hundreds of millions of lives.

“If regulators treat low-risk nicotine products as traditiona­l tobacco products ... they are improperly defining them as part of the problem.

“Regulators should avoid support for measures that could have the perverse effect of prolonging cigarette consumptio­n.”

The signatorie­s, which also include experts who have advised the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence on its guidelines about reducing the harm from tobacco, published the letter after claiming to have seen a leaked document from the WHO which labelled the e-cigarettes as a “threat”.

A spokesman for WHO told the BBC: “WHO is currently working on recommenda­tions for government­s on the regulation and marketing of e-cigarettes and similar devices. “This is part of a paper that will be submitted to the par ties of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control later this year.

“We are also working with national regulatory bodies to look at regulatory options, as well as toxicology experts, to understand more about the possible impact of e-cigarettes and similar devices on health.”

Research published last week by Mr West found e-cigarettes can help improve the success rate of people trying to quit smoking by 60% compared to nicotine patches or gum.

But critics say that not enough is known about the long-term effects of the devices, which deliver nicotine in a vapour form.

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Picture: AP. A long exposure picture shows the Soyuz craft blasting off yesterday.
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