Smoking rates among youth declining in countries that allow vaping: AVI

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

An organisation representing e-users in today questioned the Union Health Ministry's advisory to states to not allow manufacture, sale and advertisement of and other Electronic Delivery Systems (ENDS), saying rates among youth are declining in countries that have allowed vaping.

The yesterday asked all states and UTs to not allow the manufacture, sale and advertisement of and other ENDS, warning that its use pose a "great health risk" to public at large, especially to children and pregnant women.

ENDS are devices that heat a solution to create an aerosol, which also frequently contains flavours, usually dissolved into propylene glycol and glycerin.

Vaping refers to inhaling and exhaling the vapour produced by an electronic or

The body also rubbished government contention that vaping will increase rates among teens, citing evidence to the contrary from a survey of 60,000 teens conducted by

"This claim is bogus as rates among youth are declining in all countries that have allowed vaping. In fact, after vaping was introduced, overall smoking rates have declined at a historical rate, which clearly points to the tremendous harm reduction potential of vaping," said AVI

Chowdhery said the evidence the government claims to have is either outdated or intentionally misinterpreted.

It is widely accepted by all major scientific institutions from Royal College of Physicians, American Cancer Society, for Sciences and Engineering as well as the USFDA that are substantially less harmful than combustible cigarettes.

"Extensive studies have been done on presence of metals in and it has been consistently found that their presence is too minuscule to cause harm. The smoke released from cigarettes have much higher levels of metals compared to e-vapour," Chowdhery said.

On the other hand, Deepak Mukarji, an advocate of harm reduction to people and the planet under the banner 'The Alternatives', said he is disappointed with the central government directives to ban e-cigarettes.

"This retrograde step denies harm reduction and potentially lifesaving alternatives to smokers by ignoring science and its emerging technologies.

"The UK parliamentary Science and report is a good basis for to relook at the science and evidence towards implementing legislation that can regulate the product development, manufacture, and distribution of licensed smoke-cessation and harm reduction vaping products," Mukarji said.

or e-cigarettes, the most common prototype, are devices that do not burn or use leaves but instead vaporise a solution, which a user then inhales. The main constituents of the solution, in addition to nicotine, are propylene glycol (with or without glycerol and flavouring agents).

In the advisory yesterday, the said as per the report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic 2017, governments of 30 countries like Mauritius, Australia, Singapore, Korea (Democratic People's Republic), Sri Lanka, Thailand, Brazil, Mexico, Uruguay, Bahrain, Iran, and United Arab Emirates, have already banned ENDS.

"It is evident that the Electronic Delivery Systems, including e-cigarettes, heat-not-burn devices, vape, e-sheesha, flavoured hookah, and the like devices or products available by whatsoever name, that enable nicotine delivery or its use, are a great health risk to public at large, especially to children, adolescents, pregnant women and women of reproductive age," the advisory said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 29 2018. 20:15 IST