Vapes threaten to undo gains in tackling dangers of tobacco, health leaders warn

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"WHO Warns Vapes Could Undermine Tobacco Control Efforts"

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Health leaders, including officials from the World Health Organization (WHO), have raised alarms regarding the increasing popularity of vapes and their potential to reverse the progress made in tobacco control. Speaking at the World Conference on Tobacco Control in Dublin, they emphasized that current efforts to assist tobacco users in quitting, raise awareness about the dangers of smoking, and implement higher taxes on tobacco products are faltering. Young people are particularly at risk, as the aggressive marketing of vaping products targets this demographic. The WHO has recommended that countries extend graphic health warnings, already mandated for cigarette packaging, to encompass vapes, e-cigarettes, heated tobacco products, and nicotine pouches, which are becoming more prevalent in the market. Despite some progress in regulation, with 133 countries now having some form of regulation for vapes, a significant number of countries still lack any regulatory measures at all, particularly in low-income regions.

The report highlights that while some countries have made strides in tobacco control, many still lag behind, especially in implementing best practices recommended by the WHO. For instance, taxation of tobacco products has not kept pace with the recommendations, as many nations have allowed tobacco products to become more affordable over the past decade. The WHO indicates that 40 countries have yet to adopt any tobacco control measures at best-practice level, and millions remain unprotected from tobacco-related health risks, which claim over 7 million lives annually. Experts argue that increasing taxes on tobacco products is one of the most effective strategies to reduce consumption and improve public health. The WHO's findings underscore the urgent need for comprehensive regulations on emerging tobacco products to prevent a potential public health crisis, especially among younger populations who are increasingly drawn to nicotine use through vapes and similar devices.

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Aggressively marketed vapes threaten to undo progress made on smoking control, according to theWorld Health Organization.

Officials, speaking at theWorld Conference on Tobacco Controlin Dublin, said efforts were stalling when it came to helping tobacco users to quit, campaigning in the media on the dangers, and imposing higher taxes on tobacco products. Young people were particularly vulnerable, it added.

Countries should consider extending the graphic health warnings already required on cigarette packets to vapes or e-cigarettes, heated tobacco products and nicotine pouches, the WHO said.

In many countries, tobacco products had become more affordable in the past decade, the report said, despite a WHO recommendation that cigarettes should be taxed at 75%. While cigarettes became less affordable in 46 countries, they became more affordable in 42 others, including 23 low or middle-income countries.

In 133 countries, vapes and similar devices are now regulated in some way – up from only eight in 2007. However, 62 countries apply no regulations at all. The extent of regulation varies, with almost 90% of wealthier countries either regulating or banning sales, compared with 66% of middle-income and only 27% of poor countries.

In the UK,disposable vapes were banned this monthin a bid to prevent young people using them and on environmental grounds.

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director general, said: “Twenty years since the adoption of theWHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, we have many successes to celebrate, but the tobacco industry continues to evolve and so must we.”

The report highlightsnicotine pouchesandheated tobacco products, as well as vapes, as examples of new products. Dr Rüdiger Krech, the WHO’s director of health promotion, said they were “aggressively marketed in ways that undermine hard-won public health gains”.

He said national regulators could not be expected to deal with an onslaught of “thousands” of new products, which represented an attempt by tobacco companies to focus attention away from their “major business” of traditional tobacco.

He added, however, that it was “hugely important to regulate these new products, because they are attracting children and young people to actually use nicotine, and that’s with the addiction that it brings”, which he said would lead to tobacco use. Data is not available for all countries, but surveys suggest about 6% of children aged 13 to 15 use e-cigarettes.

The WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic focuses onsix tobacco control measuresand rates countries on how far they have implemented them.

These include taxation, introducing smoke-free air legislation, and offering smokers help to quit. Other measures include monitoring tobacco use and prevention policies, bans on tobacco advertising and sponsorship, and warning people about the dangers via pack labels and information campaigns.

Since 2007, 155 countries have implemented at least one of the six measures at “best-practice” level, the report found, with four countries – Brazil, Mauritius, the Netherlands and Turkey – implementing the full package.

However, 40 countries have no measure at best-practice level, and more than 30 countries still allow cigarettes to be sold with no mandatory health warning. It means billions of people remain unprotected from the ill effects of tobacco, which claimskills more than 7 million people a year, the report warned.

Alison Cox, director of policy and advocacy at the NCD [non-communicable disease] Alliance, said: “It’s clear that there is a long way to go if we are to reduce the many unnecessary tobacco related illnesses and premature deaths still occurring globally.

“Raising taxes is one of the most effective measures that offers governments a triple win of reducing tobacco consumption, saving lives and healthcare costs, while raising much-needed revenue.”

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Source: The Guardian