Author: Staff Writer

  • Focus on Harm Reduction

    Focus on Harm Reduction

    Experts share their insights relating to tobacco harm reduction during the April 25 In Focus webinar

    In the run-up to the 10th Conference of the Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in Panama (COP10) this November, public health professionals, industry representatives and policy experts on April 25 shared their insights into issues relating to tobacco harm reduction (THR) and sustainability as part of the GTNF’s IN FOCUS online series. Following is a summary of the presentations and panel discussions.

    Contributed

    Credit: Red Pixel
    James Murphy

    James Murphy, director of research and science at BAT, opened by saying that tobacco harm reduction is simple in concept: the switching of people who wish to use nicotine from risky forms of combustible tobacco products to lower risk tobacco and nicotine products. He noted that THR was the reason he joined the industry as a scientist almost 20 years ago, and that motivation remains today as the principal driver for coming to work each morning. His focus is making THR the centerpiece for all of BAT’s scientific research efforts.

    Murphy outlined that the challenges to THR are many, but they are outweighed by the opportunities for reducing the health impact of the industry across the globe if stakeholders get it right. He sets out four key topic areas for his remarks: 1) the benefits of THR for reducing the impact of the industry on global public health; 2) the key challenges facing THR; 3) the need for a common view on the race to zero combustion; and 4) the importance of science.

    Murphy stated that adult smokers who wish to continue to use nicotine now have access to a range of reduced-risk products that are better for them and for those around them. In countries that have embraced the concept of THR, including Sweden, the U.K., Japan and the U.S., there have been significant declines in smoking rates as smokers have migrated to noncombustible products, such as heated-tobacco products, vapor products and oral nicotine and tobacco products. Real-world evidence continues to be collected that indicates improvements in quality of life and lower instances of smoking-related morbidity when noncombustible products displace cigarettes.

    Murphy gave an overview of upcoming opportunities for THR to be discussed globally, including the U.K. government’s upcoming publication of a new tobacco control plan, the COP10 meeting in Panama, the recommendations from the Reagan-Udall Foundation’s evaluation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products, and proposals in 2024 from the EU around the third Tobacco Products Directive (TPD).

    He set out four key challenges on THR: 1) objective science remaining at the core of the debate, with agreed frameworks for all stakeholders on assessing the risk profile of noncombustibles; 2) ensuring each country offers consumer access to regulated noncombustibles; 3) regulations must be enforced to prevent unregulated black market products being sold to consumers; and 4) preventing youth access to nicotine products and balancing the debate with the benefits of adult smokers switching to lower risk products.

    Murphy then turned to the importance of the race to zero combustion, setting out the relative harm reductions (90 percent to 95 percent less) from heated-tobacco, vapor and oral products as compared to combustibles. Consumers using lower risk noncombustible tobacco and nicotine products experience substantially lower levels of toxins, comparable to levels observed in those who quit using tobacco products altogether.

    He focused on the need for the industry to codify what is meant by THR: a race to zero combustion, not zero nicotine use, and reducing cigarette prevalence to below 5 percent, the accepted threshold for effectively zero in a country. He highlighted Sweden, which, through the use of snus and oral tobacco products, will achieve its smoking target 16 years ahead of the EU and has the lowest smoking-related disease outcomes anywhere in the EU.

    He then turned to the importance of world-class science in providing a robust evidence base to substantiate the role of reduced-risk products (RRPs) in global THR. Regulators need it to form the basis of regulation; politicians need it so they can cut through the rhetoric; and consumers need it so they can feel confident in switching to lower risk products. He remarked that industry science is necessary as regulators require specific data on the manufactured products, as seen in the U.S. with premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) regulations or in the EU with the TPD.

    Murphy closed by lamenting the polarization of the global debate on THR and the lack of scientific conferences where all stakeholders—industry included—can debate scientific studies and come to common conclusions on THR science to drive progress forward. His final remarks highlighted that the race to zero combustion has only really begun and that common science conclusions must form the basis of what the industry does.

    Riccardo Polosa

    Riccardo Polosa, professor of internal medicine at the University of Catania and founder of the Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction, began his remarks by stating that there is no doubt that the evidence in favor of e-cigarettes being effective in terms of smoking substitution is quite strong. He highlighted the systematic reviews, randomized control trials and population studies that show evidence that e-cigarettes are important tools in helping smokers quit.

    Turning to heated-tobacco products (HTPs), Polosa explained that it is true that HTPs are similar to e-cigarettes in that they deliver nicotine in an equivalent range and mimic the ritualistic aspects of cigarettes, and both have a potential for smoking substitution. Although there is population evidence to suggest that HTPs are effective in this, to date, there have been no real randomized controlled trials that have proved these assumptions.

    He set out that researchers at the Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR) had designed and conducted a study to directly compare e-cigarettes with HTPs, involving the first randomized controlled trial of HTPs, in order to compare the effectiveness, tolerability and acceptability of both HTPs and refillable e-cigarettes for the purposes of cigarette substitution. The design of the study was standard: a switching trial, involving the randomization of 220 smokers not intending to quit but interested in trying new technologies and tar-free products. These 220 random subjects were split across two different products: IQOS 2.4 for HTPs and Justfog Q16 for e-cigarettes.

    Polosa highlighted that the results showed clearly that the efficacy in terms of smoking substitution for HTPs is impressive, demonstrating how HTPs can help smokers to quit, with a continuous abstinence rate of 39 percent for HTPs versus 30.8 percent for e-cigarettes. He also showed that the number of dual users reduced over time, with the number of quitters increasing over time, and commented that this is a trajectory not normally seen in conventional smoking cessation trials.

    Looking at risk perception, Polosa stated that there was no difference between the two groups: People using e-cigarettes perceive conventional tobacco as fairly high risk whereas they do not perceive their smoke-free product to be as risky as tobacco or conventional cigarettes. He also highlighted that both groups showed a clear improvement in terms of exercise tolerance over time, with results apparent even in week 4 of the trial, very early after switching.

    He concluded by answering the question of whether HTPs are successful: yes.

    Delon Human

    The next speaker, Delon Human, president of Health Diplomats, started by quoting the definition of Article 1d of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) and highlighted the phrase “harm reduction strategies” (HRS). He went on to set out that the overall goal of population health is to prevent disease and premature death, but it is important to remember that these are individuals with different needs and lifestyles. It is also important to include health professionals in any discussion on HRS to balance the needs of populations and individual health as well as the rights of individuals to access healthcare and to use nicotine products.

    He stated that he wanted to make three suggestions to accelerate THR.

    The No. 1 issue for Human is engagement. A whole-of-society and whole-of-government approach, involving multi-stakeholder action, is required, and more needs to be done with key stakeholders in the tobacco and nicotine industries, particularly regarding engagement with the WHO and governments. He continued by saying that Article 5.3 of the FCTC does not exclude engagement between industry and government; complex problems can only be solved with multi-stakeholder engagement, and engagement does not mean agreement. This engagement with industry is needed to facilitate the crucial exchange of knowledge and data.

    Turning to his second suggestion, Human made the point about the centrality of science in the debate. The “quit or die” approach is ineffective, irresponsible and disrespectful of patients and consumers. They need to hear the full story and have access to information and products that do not involve combustion, specifically reduced-risk alternatives if they cannot or will not quit.

    He highlighted that this transformation can be accelerated if global public health scientists were to embrace the opportunity to test the benefits of adult smokers switching to reduced-risk products. Human commented that, for too long, the argument has been that there is not enough evidence to validate THR in smoking cessation. HRS have been used successfully with HIV/AIDs, drug control and alcohol consumption, and they should be applied to tobacco control. He raised the speed of Covid vaccine testing, which gave a powerful validation of HRS.

    Human spoke to the opportunity presented by COP10 to prepare the ground for further research in HRS and the new evidence available from countries where governments have allowed properly regulated reduced-risk products. Where THR has been adopted, smoking rates have reduced.

    He gave examples: In Sweden, the smoking rate is the lowest in the EU at 5.6 percent whereas Germany has seen rates increase to up to 36 percent. He lamented that “smoke-free Sweden” should be a case study in successful THR, but little attention has been paid to the public health revolution there. In the U.K., the government’s “swap to stop” scheme has both incentivized and funded adult smokers to switch from combustibles to vaping, and more broadly, the country has seen a 4.3 percent decrease in smoking. In Japan, heat-not-burn (HnB) products launched in 2014 and have led to a significant decline in smoking rates: Between 2016 and 2019, the number of adult smokers fell by 10 percent. In the U.S., nicotine products go through a rigorous and scientific PMTA-testing process, which costs hundreds of millions of dollars to companies, and other countries could benefit from this knowledge to support their adult smokers to quit.

    He closed this section of his remarks by suggesting that each example merits a country case study to consider how each THR approach has reduced incidence of smoking-related diseases and premature deaths, and more engagement among the WHO, governments and the whole of industry would facilitate progress in THR.

    Lastly, Human turned to industry contributions to the debate, highlighting the critical role played by the GTNF in bringing stakeholders together. He highlighted several dimensions that merit industry having a seat at the table: 1) R&D capacity, with companies investing greatly in this, including specific knowledge on consumer behavior; 2) product innovation, with all stakeholders needing to incentivize innovation while ensuring consumer safety and high standards; and 3) responsible marketing practices, with the marketing to children of primary concern.

    In closing, Human stated that there are 100 million consumers worldwide who have switched from combustible cigarettes to noncombustible nicotine alternatives, and now is the time to accelerate, transform and modernize tobacco control by injecting HRS, ensuring that affordable, accessible and acceptable alternatives can make a contribution.

    Following his remarks, Human moderated a panel discussion titled “Using the FCTC to Accelerate Tobacco Harm Reduction” that included the following panelists: Grant Churchill, tutor in medicine at New College Oxford and associate professor in chemical pharmacology at the University of Oxford; Ehsan Latif, senior vice president of grants management and health and science strategy at the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World; Mihaela Raescu, professor in the faculty of dental medicine at Titu Maiorescu University in Bucharest; and Heino Stoever, social scientist and professor of social scientific addiction research at the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences in Germany.

    Human referenced the positive work done around the work in the harm reduction space, specifically citing Sweden, the U.K. and Japan as world-leading in this field. He spoke of Sweden’s incredibly low smoking rates with only 5.6 percent of the population using combustible tobacco.

    He explained that the success seen in these countries needs to be examined in greater detail to highlight why vapes in the U.K., snus in Sweden and heated tobacco in Japan are increasing in popularity.

    Human then detailed how several of his patients have seen remarkable improvements in their taste, smell and respiration since switching from combustible tobacco to RRPs in only two weeks.

    Churchill tailored his contribution around the misconception of nicotine. He emphasized that tobacco, specifically combustible tobacco, needs to be separated from nicotine. He set out the molecular level of nicotine as a compound and explained that nicotine is not harmful in the concentration it exists within RRPs.

    Churchill outlined that tobacco is made up of 4,000 smaller compounds, many of which are harmful. Nicotine represents only one of those 4,000 compounds and is not nearly as damaging as most of the others found in tobacco. For that reason, the education and rebranding of nicotine is critical in establishing RRPs as safe alternatives to combustible tobacco.

    Latif spoke primarily from the regulatory perspective of the panel and led the conversation about the upcoming COP10 summit hosted in Panama later this year. He expressed his concern over a lack of action and not wanting legislators to make rash decisions. He called for all decisions to be led by facts and science, explaining that no RRP category should ever be prohibited as it will only lead to illicit trade and unregulated, untested products.

    Latif echoed the message from Churchill that combustible tobacco is causing the most harm within the industry and that legislators need to take action to reduce the number of smokers. He emphasized this by saying, “You can’t wait 10 [years] to 15 years and then count the bodies at the end … We need some action now.”

    Raescu explained the oral health benefits of switching from combustible tobacco to RRPs, describing how oral health improves drastically within nine months of making the switch. She mentioned that there is a decrease in bacterial plague concentration and quality, resulting in major oral health improvement.

    Raescu also called for improved education for doctors and other health practitioners regarding nicotine and tobacco. She set out her belief that, currently, a lot of misinformation and misunderstanding results in the wrong advice for patients, having a negative effect on their individual health. Nicotine as a compound must be better understood by medical practitioners in order for it to be correctly conveyed to legislators.

    Stoever started by giving a summary of the focus of his career on harm reduction in Germany. Using his experiences from Covid-19 and other emergencies, Stoever emphasized the importance of education and the lack of this in Germany: 60 percent of Germans think the dangers of vaping equate to those of tobacco. Stoever went on to set out that public health agencies in Germany are not providing adequate information on the benefits of reduced-risk products, and this gap has had to be filled by academics.

    He spoke to the changes observed during the pandemic, where people’s lifestyle patterns changed radically to include working from home: There was an increased observance of people smoking during virtual meetings, which demonstrated the effectiveness of normal structural prevention strategies and social controls on preventing smoking besides behavioral prevention.

    Mary Glindon

    The panel discussion was followed by a keynote presentation by Mary Glindon, Member of Parliament for North Tyneside in the U.K. and vice chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Vaping.

    Glindon set out her role at the APPG and the reasons for her interest in the topic of tobacco harm reduction. She spoke about her late husband’s transformation from smoking to vaping—his “pipe”—and the impact more widely that smoking has on her constituents in the northeast of England. Not only does she hear from those who have switched that their health has improved but also their finances, given the lower costs of vaping.

    She spoke of her support for the U.K.’s ambition to be smoke-free by 2030 and the work undertaken by the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (previously Public Health England) since 2015 to support vaping as a key harm reduction strategy, with it being proven to be at least 95 percent less harmful. Going further, Glindon praised the U.K.’s approach—one that she described as world leading and evidence led—with e-cigarettes at the heart of its strategy. She also highlighted the independent review last year by Javed Khan into “making smoking obsolete,” which included support for vaping as one of his key recommendations.

    However, Glindon then spoke of the concerns Khan had also raised in his report that the U.K. will miss its 2030 target if it does not accelerate the rate of smoking decline by at least 40 percent.

    She gave a series of recommendations on what action the government should take to remedy this while being clear that the preference is that people should neither smoke nor vape, nor should nonsmokers take up vaping. She spoke of tobacco harm reduction through vaping in the U.K. being consumer led but that it had left more than 6 million people who had not yet made the switch. Ensuring access to the right information and tackling misinformation and misperceptions of the relative harms of e-cigarettes versus combustible tobacco is key and must be embedded in all approaches on tobacco harm reduction.

    Glindon also stated the need for effective communication strategies from governments, approved and trusted independent health messaging and the inclusion of the benefits of switching on vape packaging and on cigarette packaging too. She raised the need to ensure that medical professionals at local stop smoking services are sufficiently supported to speak authoritatively on reduced-risk products, with clinicians signposted to the latest clinical guidance and evidence on e-cigarettes.

    Covering the recent announcements by Minister for Public Health Neil O’Brien, Glindon called for the U.K. government to finally release its new tobacco control plan and the new tobacco and related products regulations, both of which are two years overdue. She called for responsible companies like those represented at the GTNF to call out the bad actors who are undermining progress on tobacco harm reduction and for the industry as a whole to prevent youth access, tackle illegal products and promote sustainability.

    Turning to the world stage, Glindon highlighted pressures from outside the U.K., including alternative policy directions from the EU and World Customs Organization on tariffs and taxes. Going further, she spoke to the upcoming COP10 conference in Panama later this year, calling it “the biggest threat to the U.K.’s world-beating harm reduction strategy” with its “singular mission focused on actively encouraging countries to ban vaping as part of its tobacco control approach, purposefully flouting the evidence of vaping’s success.” She called on the U.K. government to show leadership, to send ministers as part of the delegation to COP10 and to “actively take part in leading the conversation instead of only being a passive observer and financial contributor.”

    Glindon then expanded on her concerns around preventing youth access, tackling illegal and noncompliant products and ensuring that the issue of sustainability, particularly with disposable devices, is addressed. She also called for an update on the vaping evidence set out by Public Health England back in 2015, asking how to get to a certainty greater than 95 percent less harmful.

    In her closing remarks, Glindon spoke of the need to expand beyond a focus in the U.K. solely on vaping as a tool for tobacco harm reduction and called for the government to consider HnB and oral nicotine products to help reach the remaining 6.6 million smokers in the U.K. She emphasized the need for more research to be done, independent of commercial interests.

    Finally, Glindon made clear that the industry has to address the key issues it faces—rogue players, youth access and environmental concerns—otherwise it faces being regulated out of existence. Her final words were “Be good: work hard, tackle the problems, seize the future.”

    Derek Yach

    Global health advocate Derek Yach opened by stating how the world’s health is in a much worse state since coming out of the Covid-19 pandemic, particularly regarding noncommunicable diseases (cancers, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and chronic lung illnesses) as well as mental health.

    He used his own experience in the field of noncommunicable diseases to explain how different approaches must be taken, highlighting his concerns that what worked 20 years ago will no longer work in today’s climate and that modern science and health have to receive political and private sector support.

    He then introduced tobacco harm reduction as a critical category that can help to reduce the growing concerns in this area. Yach spoke to the point that governments around the world are being inactive to, or even dismissive of, the clear and obvious benefits of RRPs. This is risking the health and lives of many of its own citizens.

    Yach gave his own recommendations on how governments should address the 1.1 billion global combustible tobacco smokers still in existence today, referencing the positive work being conducted in the U.K., specifically mentioning the recent review by Javed Khan and the U.K. government’s recently introduced “swap to stop” scheme, which will offer 1 million vape starter kits to current smokers.

    He made a call for the WHO and other governing bodies to appoint a commission that could 1) further develop the science and evidence now available; 2) review the progress of the U.K. and FDA in authorizing this positive change; and 3) take stock of the current situation and set it out in front of COP10 in Panama in November.

    He then outlined the importance of the role of physicians and the need for them to be properly educated to understand the difference between tobacco and nicotine and between cigarettes and e-cigarettes. Without this education, medical professionals are unable to prescribe other, less harmful solutions to their patients.

    Next, Yach spoke of the importance of COP10, urging delegates to showcase positive examples of how RRPs are used around the world to radically reduce the number of combustible tobacco smokers. Sweden, the U.K., South Korea and Japan were all offered as examples of how RRPs have been deployed correctly to help users make the switch away from cigarettes.

    Finally, Yach held a mirror to the tobacco industry, commenting that it, too, was in need of further analysis of its own practices. He explained that in many low-income and middle-income nations, RRPs are legally available; however, the industry has not launched or given easy access to the range of harm reduction products available.

    To this point, the major focus on RRPs has been in high-income countries, and there needs to be an acceleration of getting these products to all countries around the world.

    Yach concluded his remarks by reflecting on his opening comments: Tobacco harm reduction is about stopping the growing trend of noncommunicable diseases and saving lives.

    Yach then went on to lead a discussion panel titled “Drawing on Behavioral and Consumer Insights to Encourage Harm Reduction,” which included the following panelists: Jessica Zdinak, social and behavioral scientist and owner at Applied Research and Analysis Consulting; Mohamadi Sarkar, scientific strategy and analysis and regulatory affairs at Altria Client Services; and Cother Hajat, public health physician and epidemiologist at Independent Respondent.

    Yach identified several smokers across the world attempting to quit smoking and asked panelists to consider what approaches should be adopted to help them do so. In many of the deprived communities of the world, Yach mentioned that availability of tobacco harm reduction products is an issue in order to get people to quit and tasked the panel to come up with solutions to remedy that.

    Yach lamented the disinformation surrounding the e-cigarette or vaping product use-associated lung injury crisis that appeared in many academic research papers, which can still be found on the internet despite retractions being made by a research journal. He suggested that inspiration could be found from Twitter to ensure that such articles can be traced in order to issue a warning and correction relating to the disinformation.

    Sarkar focused on the personal dimension that needs to be adopted by each of the 1 billion smokers around the world who need to stop smoking and shared his memories of treating smokers with diseases, such as myocardial infarction, when he was a clinician, but who ultimately did not quit.

    Sarkar’s main concern is that disinformation has become a significant barrier to smokers quitting, with 80 percent of Americans in 2021 believing, wrongly, that e-cigarettes are as harmful as, if not more harmful than, combustible cigarettes. He also lamented that 80 percent of doctors surveyed believed that nicotine causes cancer.

    Zdinak criticized the public health profession generally for omitting the basics of psychology and physiology in their appraisal of harm reduction efforts. She asserted that smokers’ basic needs must be met to successfully get consumers to switch to alternative products that are less harmful.

    She went on to say that health communication messages should capture what people are thinking and feeling. In doing so, Zdinak referred to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and where smoking cessation sits within smokers’ priorities and said that community groups may be necessary to create a higher order for them to consider quitting.

    Hajat stated that the voices of smokers are often missing from research reports and reinforced the need to change that. She praised the U.K. Department of Health for embracing tobacco harm reduction products as vital weapons in its arsenal to improve the health of the nation and welcomed recent proposals to use pack inserts in combustible cigarettes.

    She also welcomed the incentives for pregnant women, who make up 10 percent of the smoking population, and for people on low incomes to receive starter kits to accelerate smoking cessation and meet the government’s 2030 target to become smoke-free.

    Jeremy Lim

    The panel discussion was followed by a keynote presentation from Jeremy Lim, CEO and co-founder of AMiLi. Lim opened by reflecting on the themes developed throughout today’s conference. He started by reaffirming the words of Yach, echoing his sentiment about the polarization of tobacco control and a lack of understanding of the differences between combustible tobacco and other nicotine products. He made clear that this is essential for countries in the developing world, which are chronically short of doctors, making misinformation even more problematic.

    He supported the concept of introducing a WHO commission that specifically analyzes the positive progress made in countries like Sweden, the U.K. and Japan, which could result in a homogenized view of tobacco harm reduction, eradicating the misunderstanding about tobacco and reduced-risk products.

    Lim then reemphasized what Sarkar had set out, explaining that much of the focus and attention is around theoretical concerns, such as youth access and environmental impact, but not enough spotlight is given to the individual smokers themselves who suffer the greatest impact from their addiction. He spoke of a systemic bias against smokers, citing the perception that smoking is a self-inflicted issue where subtle blame is given to the individuals who smoke. Smoking is not seen as a mental health or social health issue—it is seen as a choice.

    Offering his own thoughts on the role society plays in helping or hindering the progress of tobacco harm reduction, Lim used the analogy of a person pushing a large cylinder up a steep hill. The gradient of that hill is determined by society—the more society hampers harm reduction, the harder it will be for people to quit; vice versa, the more society embraces the concept, the more support each smoker is given to quit.

    Lim outlined his concern over the rising cases of youth access to vaping products, calling for a joint effort from everyone involved in the industry to remove these “bad players.”

    He concluded his remarks by urging the industry to put its ideological and political preferences aside and to focus on science and on individual smokers instead.

  • FEELM Commends UK Vapor Outlook During GTNF Event

    FEELM Commends UK Vapor Outlook During GTNF Event

    Echo Liu, FEELM’s European Division director

    FEELM, the flagship atomization technology brand for Smoore International, the world’s largest vaping company, commended the U.K. Government for the country’s tobacco harm reduction strategy. The U.K.’s vaping outlook centers around the use of vaping as a tool for smoking cessation, and encouraging existing smokers to transition to a less harmful alternative.

    Andrew Lewer, Delon Human and Echo Liu

    During a breakfast event before the virtual IN FOCUS seminar, an annual half-day event organized by the Global Tobacco and Nicotine Forum (GTNF) that focuses on harm reduction, FEELM representatives spoke in central London alongside Andrew Lewer MBE MP, the vice chair of the U.K. Parliament’s All-Party Parliamentary Group for Vaping, as well as Delon Human, the president of Health Diplomats and a former Secretary-General of the World Medical Association.

    The conversations centered on the theme of addressing tobacco harm reduction, and how best to support smokers to transition to reduced-risk products, including vapes, heat-not-burn products, and oral nicotine.

    “We welcome the UK Government’s ongoing recognition of the potential that vaping has to achieve its ambitions for a smoke-free future, and we are committed to working with regulators and the wider industry to address the key challenges the sector faces,” said Echo Liu, FEELM’s European Division director. “Our vaping solutions have been widely adopted in more than fifty markets – including the UK, France, and Germany – and these are helping millions of smokers to improve their health by switching to vaping.”

    FEELM’s disposable ceramic coil technologies have already been launched in major markets such as France, the U.K. and Belgium, and will soon be available in other key markets, according to a press release.

    “The FEELM MAX solution, which offers more puffs, greater taste consistency, and a fully visible e-liquid measure, is the best disposable available which ensures regulatory compliance,” the release states. “FEELM will be launching its FEELM MAX at the Birmingham Vaper Expo on May 13.”

  • Taiwan Boosts E-Cig Investigations After New Rules

    Taiwan Boosts E-Cig Investigations After New Rules

    Credit: Yao Photograph

    Taiwanese authorities are conducting more than 2,000 vaping-related investigations per month following amendments to the Tobacco Hazards Prevention Act that banned e-cigarettes and tightened heated-tobacco product restrictions, reports The Taipei Times.  

    Fines totaling TWD280,000 ($9,117) have been imposed in 18 cases, the Health Promotion Administration (HPA) said. 

    HPA data showed that about 67 percent of the 2,173 cases were for allegedly selling e-cigarettes, 477 were for advertising e-cigarettes, 40 were for displaying e-cigarettes, and 42 were for e-cigarettes or HTP use. 

    “What is worth noticing is that among the 42 cases of alleged illegal use, 41 involved people aged under 20,” HPA Tobacco Control Division head Chen Miao-hsin said.

    The amendments were implemented last month and also increased the age to buy cigarettes to 20, increased the size of required health warnings on cigarette cartons and expanded nonsmoking zones in public spaces. 

    Since the vaping ban was enacted in Taiwan on March 22, 15 out of 44 vape shops in Kaohsiung City have closed, according to the city’s Department of Health.

    Among the city’s 44 stores, 10 have completely shut down their businesses while 15 have closed their doors, according to media reports. The rest of the stores have switched to selling other products, as the store owners said that the fines are too high to risk, according to Taiwan News.

    In addition to intensive inspections of physical stores, the health department is monitoring online sales and social media advertisements. So far, one violator who made e-cigarette advertisements will be interviewed and fined.

  • Altria Tells Jury of ‘No Benefit’ from Juul Investment

    Altria Tells Jury of ‘No Benefit’ from Juul Investment

    Credit: JHVE Photo

    Lawyers for Altria Group Inc. told a jury that the company didn’t benefit from its 2021 $12.8 billion investment in Juul Labs Inc. in a trial over whether Altria helped Juul Labs promote sales that led to a rise in youth vaping. The trial is a test case brought by the San Francisco school system.

    Altria played a passive role in Juul’s efforts to market e-cigarettes to young users and “hasn’t received a penny for this investment, they haven’t benefited,” Beth Wilkinson, an attorney for the company, argued as the trial kicked off Monday in San Francisco federal court, according to Bloomberg News.

    The 2018 investment vaporized to $250 million, she said, referring to the value of the Juul investment at the end of 2022 that Altria announced earlier this year when the company exchanged that investment for rights to heated-tobacco product technology.

    Attorneys representing the San Francisco Unified School District told U.S. District Judge William Orrick that Wilkinson’s statements on the Juul investment to the jury were “prejudicial” to plaintiffs and violated ground rules on excluding certain information at trial.

    The judge said he’ll take up the objection Tuesday morning before the trial resumes.

    The bellwether trial forces Altria to publicly defend itself solo for the first time as it faces thousands more cases that were brought against the company and Juul. In December, Juul Labs agreed to pay more than $1.2 billion to settle more than 5,000 suits blaming the company for a youth vaping epidemic across the US.

    Altria’s “going to say, ‘We didn’t market the product,’” Thomas Cartmell, a lawyer representing the school district, told jurors. “That’s true, but it’s very important for you all to know what Altria knew as they pursued and partnered with Juul,” he said, adding that Altria knew Juul’s marketing tactics would appeal to and hook young people, including kids.

    Juul sales “skyrocketed” after Altria’s 2018 investment and the tobacco company helped the startup market its products and set up 10,000 new stores, Cartmell said. Altria knew Juul’s plans to boost sales would frustrate the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s efforts to curb youth e-cigarette use, he said.

    The sprawling litigation in San Francisco federal court includes about 4,270 personal injury suits and more than 1,434 complaints brought by government entities and native Indian tribes, in addition to a proposed class-action fight, according to a recent court filing.

    Juul and Altria defended the first trial that started in March over a case brought by Minnesota over deceptive marketing of e-cigarettes. The companies last month settled the state’s case, though details are yet to be disclosed.

    In April, Juul agreed to pay $462 million to six states and the District of Columbia to resolve lawsuits and investigations into the marketing of addictive vaping products to children.

  • Mixed Messages

    Mixed Messages

    Credit: Onticello

    The head of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products sent mixed messages during a recent public event.

    By VV staff

    When the American Vapor Manufacturers (AVM) Association announced it had secured a Q&A session with the Brian King, the industry was taken by surprise. It was the first time King, the director of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), would speak with vaping industry advocates publicly and answer questions from the audience. Surprisingly, King was quite candid. He did shy away from certain questions, however, and some of his responses were questionable.

    Brian King

    Youth e-cigarette use was first declared a national epidemic in December 2018 by then U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams. King said the “FDA has not used that terminology” (epidemic) in its “most recent estimates” of youth use. However, during a hearing of the House Oversight Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy in 2021, then acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock was asked if Juul Labs was “the e-cigarette company most responsible for creating this epidemic.”

    She answered that it does “appear” to be the case. The title of the FDA’s own press release was “An Epidemic Continues: Youth Vaping in America.” A 2018 FDA focus group study conducted by the agency reported that “‘epidemic’ ads [had a] perceived effectiveness score of 4.17 out 5.0.” King defended the agency’s youth-oriented anti-vaping ads, which he said were “rigorously evaluated” before and after they aired and were effective at reaching teenagers. King ignored that the ads continue to use the FDA’s approved youth vaping “epidemic” terminology.

    “So, I believe you’re thinking about the CDC [U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]. And FDA has not used that terminology to view the most recent estimates of youth use. I will say that I’m an epidemiologist by training, so I’m fully cognizant of the definition of an epidemic, which is unprecedented increases over what you’d expect at baseline,” said King. “That said, I think, no, that science has shown a decline in the number of youth users. And that’s a good thing. Over the past couple of years, we have seen [a] decline since the peak in 2019. It’s still too high.

    “Since I’ve started, I have not [used the term]. I’m not aware of any of my staff. But as far as I’m aware, we have not used the term. It’s ultimately up to respected individuals. There’s certainly disagreements among epidemiologists. Like there is in any discipline, you’re going to find people disagree.”

    It should be noted that King’s disdain for vaping is well-documented. King is credited with creating the term “e-cigarette or vaping product use-associated lung injury,” or EVALI. The term was used by the CDC for the lung injuries caused by the 2019 spread of illicit THC cartridges tainted with vitamin E acetate during King’s tenure at the CDC. The name suggested that nicotine vaping products (e-cigarettes) were responsible for at least 70 deaths attributed to black market THC products. No nicotine vaping device has ever been associated with an EVALI death or any death; however, King and the CDC have never tried to correct the misinformation.

    The event was moderated by AVM Vice President Allison Boughner and its director of legislative and external affairs, Gregory Conley. When the moderators asked King if the FDA had ever identified a single nicotine vaping product, not an illicit THC cartridge (referencing EVALI deaths), that could be more hazardous than combustible smoking, King dodged the question.

    “I would say that at present, we evaluate the merits of evidence that has been submitted to this agency. In terms of applications and science on their products, at present, we have authorized 23 e-cigarette products or devices that we have found and that benefits outweigh the risks,” he explained. “And we’ll continue to do that. The onus is on the applicants to submit that information. And we’re fully open to evaluating that information and then making an informed scientific decision.”

    Being more direct, moderators asked King if vaping products are far less hazardous than smoking cigarettes and if that is something consumers should know. “I would agree with the statement that if an adult smoker were to transition completely from a cigarette to an e-cigarette, that would be a benefit to their health, yes,” King responded. Moderators then questioned whether it was ethical to mislead the public, letting people believe that vaping isn’t safer than smoking cigarettes.

    Although we know that in general, e-cigarettes have lower risks than a conventional cigarette, there’s a broad class, and there’s a lot of different factors that can influence the extent of risk. And so it’s not just a simple statement that every single e-cigarette is going to be lower risk,” King said. “There are different factors that we have to consider, particularly when it comes to risks to vulnerable populations like kids.”

    Fighting misinformation

    Credit: Vadim Pastuh

    King acknowledged that vaping has been effective at helping smokers quit smoking. He added that the FDA and CTP don’t want people using combustible cigarettes. Combustible products introduce 7,000 chemicals and 70 carcinogens into users. However, the misinformation surrounding vaping products is massive. King acknowledged that he is “fully cognizant” of the misperceptions.

    “I am wholly open to enhanced efforts by the Center for Tobacco Products to message not only on the continuum of risk but also misperceptions related to nicotine,” he said. “But again, the devil is going to be in the details there in terms of making sure that we have scientifically defensible messages and that we’re delivering it to the target population, which is adult smokers, and not inadvertently delivering it to the unintended populations where there’s consequences, including youth.”

    The FDA’s fight against misinformation is confusing at best. For the last several years, former CTP Director Mitch Zeller and several CTP employees have repeatedly stated in public that correcting misperceptions surrounding vaping and nicotine are part of the CTP’s agenda. King seemed to imply that little had been done so far in accomplishing that goal. He said that little had been done, and that was due to competing priorities at the CTP.

    When you have a finite number of resources and people, you have to prioritize what you do to have the greatest impact. And so, I will say that for my part, coming into this position, there’s four key tenants that I am adhering to, and that’s strong science, stakeholder relations, communications and health equity,” King said. “And so, obviously, the stakeholder relations and communications are pivotal to this. In terms of my prioritization, I think it’s important that we engage with people, hear them out, but also use science to inform our communication strategies moving forward. It’s not that we haven’t done this work before but it’s just where prioritization is moving forward. And I can tell you that we’re working on it.”

    Concerning misperceptions and the FDA’s message in the public arena, moderators questioned King on the FDA’s advertising. FDA ads have portrayed vapers as being possessed by demons or shapeshifting metal dragons, and vaping will cause huge parasites to crawl through your skin. None of these things have ever been reported as being true. King said that the agency does a “rigorous evaluation” both before and after the implementation of any of its campaigns, and all of the FDA’s youth-centric campaigns have very targeted strategies to reach that target population.

    “We cognitively test them and do science in the beginning, and then we evaluate them on the back end. And that science has shown demonstrably that there is a beneficial impact. That said, I think that we’ve got opportunity for better public engagement on our campaigns,” he said, which didn’t really provide a clear answer to the question. “That is a critical component of our work. We don’t function in silos, and we want the opportunity to engage, but we’ve got to give people that opportunity. And if they’ve got data, if they’ve got evidence to demonstrate that a certain message or a certain target audience is going to be problematic in terms of the campaign, we welcome it.”

    Illicitly speaking

    confusedBans on consumer goods haven’t worked well historically. Prohibition of alcohol and marijuana led to massive black markets for those products. U.S. states that have enacted tobacco flavor bans, such as Massachusetts, have seen a huge increase in black markets. King said this depends on how an illicit source is defined. He added that any vaping or other tobacco product on the market that does not have FDA authorization is considered illegal, and anyone selling those products is operating in the black market.

    “In terms of our enforcement and compliance strategy, we’re committed to taking action to address those that are violating it. And that can take a broad spectrum of action, whether it’ll be warning letters all the way up to civil money penalties as well as injunctions,” he said. “But we have an obligation to enforce the law. And that’s what we will do. That is what Congress has told us to do. And so we’re committed to continuing to do that. But in addition, we’re also working to make sure we get efficiencies and ramp up our efforts around reviewing applications.”

    When questioned whether he had concerns about the black market continuing to grow, King said the CTP is committed to continuing to review premarket tobacco product applications as quickly as possible to guarantee a clear pathway to a marketing order. He’s also equally committed to making sure that the regulatory agency enforces the law. He says he’s committed to continue to implement the law.

    “This is what Congress has told us to do. We have specific authorities that we are responsible for, and in my job as the director [of the CTP], I have to make sure that we exercise those authorities, and toward that end, I don’t think we’re perfect,” said King. “I think we’ve got opportunity for improvement. I think that there’s always [an] opportunity for improvement. We acknowledge that. I think we can do some things better, and from our part, I’m happy to continue to move us into the next chapter of the center to make sure that we’re engaging people in a meaningful way.”

    On the enforcement front, King was asked why only small businesses bore the brunt of FDA action. King said that the CTP does not have a policy against small business and that its enforcement compliance actions have been taken against small and large businesses. However, one participant explained, many small businesses don’t have the finances to hire lawyers to petition the courts to fight the FDA. They also question whether the FDA would ever approve open-system products, which are mostly sold by independent vape shops.

    “We’re committed to enforcing the law. I will say that some of the recent actions in terms of the civil money penalties and also the injunctions were a result of companies that did not obey the law after repeated warnings. And there are many small businesses that are obeying the law and have submitted their applications and have gone through the process,” said King. And so it’s certainly possible. I will say that for our part, we’re committed to continuing to explore opportunities where we can better provide information to applicants to make sure that the process is as flexible and straightforward as possible.”

    A bad taste

    During the open question session, one participant questioned whether the FDA would ever approve a flavor other than tobacco. The business owner wanted to know if the FDA intended to have an outright ban on flavored products or any open system with potential for flavored e-juice options. King said the CTP does not have an outright ban on flavored products, but the onus is on the applicants to submit the evidence to demonstrate that the benefits among adult smokers outweigh the risks to youth.

    “So, there is no de facto policy within this center that would prevent the authorization of a flavored e-cigarette. But I will say that with continued high rates of youth use, the onus is high to make sure … to demonstrate that benefit to adult smokers,” King said. “But it’s not impossible. We’ve seen the authorization of several products already, all tobacco flavored, but we are certainly open to applications on flavored products.

    “And if the science demonstrated that there was a net benefit compared to the risk, we would authorize it. And so that’s my take-home here [that] there’s no blanket policy against flavored, but we’ve got to follow the science, and at present, we have not got sufficiently strong evidence that demonstrates that the flavors are needed for the adult smoker to quit.”

    King was also asked about memos submitted to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit but an attorney for Logic Technology showed that King reversed a recommended marketing approval of Logic Technology’s menthol vaping products, ignoring the advice of FDA scientists. King said that that was an “erroneous description” of what occurred. It was not an overrule.

    “In this case, there was [an] initial assessment of that science, and then there was further scientific discussion. And I am a scientist by training. I have been for many, many years. And we sat down and discussed the merits of the available science that was presented,” explained King. “And after the discussion of that science and those merits, the determination was made that the applicant did not meet the standard.”

    A recent report published in the journal Addiction examined e-cigarette use in England among young adults between 2007 and 2018. That study concluded that 18-year-olds to 24-year-olds who use e-cigarettes did not use vaping as a gateway to smoke combustible cigarettes. King was asked about the study and whether he believed a “gateway effect” existed despite evidence that one did not. King responded that there’s still a strong body of evidence that suggests that the gateway does exist, but it’s dependent on a variety of different factors.

    “[It’s] certainly not conclusive evidence, but there’s moderate evidence to demonstrate that [a gateway exists]. But you also have to look at the net impact of the science. And so I’ve said publicly many times that you do have some gateway effects. We’ve seen that through the past study and others, but that doesn’t mean that every single kid who’s using an e-cigarette is going to go on to smoke,” King explained. “There’s a variety of factors that impact that. So I caution folks against definitive statements like that, that every person is going to transition who uses the product. It’s certainly happening. But when you look at the net effect, we’ve definitely seen a decline in overall e-cigarette use.”

    In the end, King said that the one thing people should realize is that he’s the type of person who speaks plainly and honestly. He doesn’t have the stereotypical characteristics of a civil servant. “If there’s anything that folks know about me, it’s I aim to be the most nonbureaucratic bureaucrat that you’ve ever met, and that involves just straight-shooting. And so, if we can do better, I want to know about it, and we can definitely enhance the communication on that front,” explains King. “So, I would say more to come, but the science is going to drive it. And we’re at the initial stages in informing what effective messages are most critical to reach the target audience without unintended consequences.”

  • Insurance Agent Sued for  ‘Quietly’ Excluding Batteries

    Insurance Agent Sued for ‘Quietly’ Excluding Batteries

    A federal lawsuit has been filed by four companies that sell vaping devices against Kinsale Insurance Co., claiming the insurer dropped coverage for batteries but failed to fully inform the policyholders before denying a claim.

    If the case goes to trial and appeal, it could potentially help clarify insurers’ and insureds’ responsibilities when policy wording is changed or exclusions are added.

    “Defendant owed a fiduciary duty to plaintiffs based on trust and good faith that required defendant to act in the best interest of plaintiffs, its customers,” reads the lawsuit complaint, filed last week in U.S. District Court in Nashville. “It is reasonable for the insured to assume the policies provided the requested coverage.”

    Kinsale Insurance, based in Richmond, Virginia, offers casualty and specialty casualty insurance for cannabis, transportation and other industries. It has not yet filed an answer to the complaint, according to the Insurance Journal.

    Industry experts, however, said that the practice of changing coverage without fully notifying customers is not uncommon, and is rarely challenged. And Tennessee law may be less than crystal-clear on how far an insurer must go in notifying policyholders of changes and how specific notifications should be.

    Battery fires from nicotine and cannabis vape devices are relatively uncommon but have become a worldwide concern for consumers, fire departments and insurers. In October 2022, Michael and Elisha Schmidt suffered a fire, reportedly from a vape pen battery, and sued the four vape companies over the damage.

    The companies, Isabella Industries, Maelynn Industries, Sancia Industries and Illumivaption Inc., all had umbrella and general liability policies with Kinsale for seven years. But when the vape sellers renewed their policies in October 2022, Kinsale excluded batteries and battery-fire claims from the policies, while raising premiums, the suit claims.

    “Defendant led plaintiffs to believe that the batteries were covered after the renewal,” the complaint reads. “Defendant did not inform plaintiffs that it had removed batteries from the coverage and did not ask Plaintiffs prior to doing so.”

    The plaintiffs also argue that the policy wording was ambiguous and illusory, and thus, unenforceable under Tennessee law. The companies had always paid their premiums on time and had been loyal customers to Kinsale, they noted.

    When the Schmidts filed their lawsuit, the vape companies filed claims with Kinsale. But the insurer denied the claims, arguing that the policies did not cover batteries. Kinsale would not provide a legal defense for the insureds.

    The vape sellers argue that Kinsale’s refusal amounted to bad faith and unfair trade practices, and has cost the companies damages and attorney fees. They are asking for compensatory damages, punitive damages, legal fees and a declaration that the insurer must provide coverage and a defense.

  • Quitting is Easy

    Quitting is Easy

    Credit: Ivelin Radkov

    It seems to be very difficult for many politicians and think-tankers to change their minds.

    By George Gay

    Ever since they were mentioned in a Guardian newspaper leader in the U.K. in February, I have been fascinated by sea squirts. These tiny creatures start off as eggs and then develop into tadpole-like entities that swim around seeking a suitable rock or piece of coral on which to make their homes for life. But this is the good bit: Once they have attached themselves to their homes-for-life, they no longer need to swim or seek out suitable habitats, so they devour their own brains.

    The rest of their lives is spent blissfully drawing in sea water through one orifice, removing the nutrients they need and then squirting out what they do not want through another orifice—all without having to contemplate tricky meaning-of-life questions.

    Do these little creatures remind you of anything or anybody? To me, their way of life mirrors that of many politicians and employees of ideologically rigid “think tanks.” I mean, once these people have swum away from home, school or university and attached themselves to their political party or ideology of choice, they no longer need their brains, just a couple of orifices, one of which takes in information that is scanned for the nutrients that will feed their political or ideological prejudices and the other to squirt out the indigestible, inconvenient facts.

    You might laugh at this, or you might find it outrageous, but it would explain something that to me is otherwise inexplicable: the fact that it seems to be enormously difficult for many politicians, think-tankers and people in thrall to the aforementioned to change their minds.

    It is not unusual to hear a person who has always voted for a particular political party to say, while acknowledging that their party has been in power for years and proved itself to be incompetent, corrupted and lacking ideas, that they will continue to vote for it because “imagine what another party would have done if it had been in power during the same period,” something that, obviously, cannot be known. This is your individual as a sea squirt, operating to her full potential with two orifices while comfortably attached to her easy chair.

    In a similar vein, there is no end of people willing to tell you that tobacco smoking is the worst thing that anybody could do, but who will then add that, nevertheless, “can you imagine the awful things that vaping could usher in in the long term.” These two-orifice people look for nothing new, listen to nothing new and say nothing new.

    This resistance to doing things in new ways, even putting one foot in front of the other, was highlighted by John D. Barrow in The Book of Nothing when he quoted Francis Cornford. “Every public action, which is not customary, either is wrong, or, if it is right, is a dangerous precedent. It follows that nothing should ever be done for the first time.” Crazy as it might seem, this is where we are with vaping. Traditional tobacco products are customary, so they are OK, but vaping devices could set a dangerous precedent.

    It must have been the case that sea squirts or their relatives were in charge at Suring School in Wisconsin, USA, recently. According to a Vaping360 story relayed by Tobacco Reporter, Wisconsin legislators have had to propose a bill that would make certain invasive searches of students illegal.

    “The proposed law follows searches of students aged 14 to 17 last year in Suring, Wisconsin, in which the students were made to strip down to underwear in order for the superintendent to search for vapor devices,” the story reported. “The students were not told that they could decline the search, and parents were not informed until after the searches were completed.”

    At first, I found this story difficult to believe because it requires your accepting that somebody, or some people, thought that one way of protecting students, who might or might not have been carrying vapes, would be to humiliate them. They apparently thought that theirs was a proportionate response to student vaping.

    The students were 14 to 17, at a time of their lives that many find difficult to navigate, when they should be able to rely on the adults running their school to set an example of rational, humane behavior. Instead, they seem to have been confronted by adults obsessed with enforcing petty rules even to the extent of carrying out strip searches, which most people probably associate with prisons.

    I would suggest that even if those students vape for 50 years, it will do them less damage than the memory of being strip searched. I salute the legislators who are seeking to stop such incidents occurring again.

    An issue that seems to me to arise from the above story and one from Sheridan, Wyoming, USA, is that a lot of adults need to grow up. Their ideas on rules and discipline seem to be aligned with those of your average 13-year-old, which often tend to be inflexible. According to a Sheridan Media story relayed in TR, the city council in Sheridan was due to consider an ordinance pertaining to vaping and tobacco use by minors in the city.

    “Under the proposed ordinance, any minor [I assume, anyone under the age of 21] found possessing tobacco or electronic cigarettes (vaping devices) would be subject to a tiered system of fines through municipal court,” the story reported.

    Credit: Olly

    It’s none of my business, I suppose, because I don’t live in Wyoming, but, nevertheless, perhaps I could respectfully suggest that there should be some consultation on this. Perhaps the authorities might do well to draw on the expertise of people informed about comparative risks and gun laws in Wyoming, where I gather from the internet that just about anybody in the state who is above the age of 18 may carry a gun.

    As elsewhere, in clamping down on vaping devices, the authorities in Wyoming seem to be more concerned about things that people can protect themselves from, such as vaping, than about things that it is difficult if not impossible to protect themselves from, like being shot. At the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, the World Health Organization seemed more intent on putting on an anti-tobacco/anti-nicotine conference than protecting us from a deadly virus that, unlike tobacco smoke, could and did sweep unseen across borders.

    By the way, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rank Wyoming as having a firearm mortality rate of 25.9 per 100,000 people, which places it third highest, below Mississippi (28.6) and Louisiana (26.3). And, as another aside, this raises an interesting question about whether the CDC believes that gun ownership is a disease, but that is not for discussion here.

    Although, having said that, language does matter, according to Johanna Cohen, Bloomberg professor of disease prevention and director of the John Hopkins School of Public Health’s Institute for Global Tobacco Control. Cohen stars in a video that seems to be an advertisement for language purity by scientists and academics working in the field of opposing new-generation products (NGPs).

    It is a rather confusing video to my way of thinking because, while the voice-over makes the point that language evolves, Cohen seems not to be a Darwinist. She seems to lean toward genetically modified language, where such modifications are controlled by people such as her to avoid language developing adjectival diseases helpful to the tobacco industry.

    This all becomes rather silly in fact. At one point in the video, according to a piece by Alex Norcia writing in Filter magazine [I quote Norcia because, though I watched the video, I did not transcribe it], Cohen says that “words like ‘novel’ and ‘emerging’ are really misrepresentative by nature as a product is only new for so long.”

    I mean, come on, I know that a lot of people who like to go on about tobacco cannot resist dredging up the past, but what is she trying to do here, reignite the 1920s debate between Albert Einstein and Henri-Louis Bergson on the nature of time? As a bit of a diversion, is she seeking the illusive equation that will define for us the “now” moment? Cohen seems to want to set up an Academie Anglais when the object of the NGPs exercise should simply be to make it as easy as possible for those people who want to do so to switch from traditional combustible cigarettes to these less risky products.

    As always, if you want to make sense of something, it is best to seek out the experts, and by that, I don’t mean the scientists and academics. I mean the people who smoke and who use NGPs. At the bottom of a TR news report on the Filter piece, a viewer of the video was quoted as saying, “WE use these devices. WE define the terms. You need to stop talking and start listening.” Sixteen words that say it all.

    But Cohen is right in one way: Language is important, and those who support tobacco harm reduction (THR) should not be lulled into picking up and repeating whatever ideas the anti-tobacco/anti-nicotine activists put out. And there is a tendency to do this, especially within the tobacco industry, which is forever issuing mea culpas in an effort to curry favor with its enemies. One obvious example of this is the way in which just about everybody applies the word “addiction” to smokers and vapers without bothering to define what exactly is meant by addiction, something that I try to point up in another piece in this magazine.

    Another example can be seen in the otherwise useful World Vapers’ Alliance Policy Primer featuring case studies of the most successful countries that have embraced alternative products as a means of combating traditional smoking. It is unfortunate, in my view, that the primer at one point had this to say: “Quitting smoking is one of the hardest things to do, and smokers need all the support they can get instead of being stigmatized.”

    I find it hard to believe that anyone whose aim is to get people to switch from smoking to vaping would make this point, which I don’t think is even correct. For one thing, the hardest thing to do would vary from person to person, but it is easy to imagine that, for some people, obtaining a doctorate in quantum physics, playing Hamlet well, knitting a jumper with two arms in the right place, playing Wagner or listening to The Ring Cycle right through … might all come higher up the scale of difficulty than giving up smoking.

    I gave up smoking without recourse to any replacement or alternative products, and many of my peers did so, too, and I don’t for a minute believe that we were a particularly strong-willed bunch. Indeed, the figures showed that countless numbers of people did so at the same time.

    And even if this were not the case, I would find it difficult to understand under what circumstances any sensible person would try to encourage another person to do something by telling them it was difficult. It is time to take advantage of some corporate speak. For years now, no company worth its salt has faced problems; it has instead faced challenges. Note, the obstacle hasn’t changed, just the way of looking at it.

    The worker faced with a problem is entitled to hold her chin and shake her head. The worker faced with a challenge is set up to measure the height of the obstacle and the length of the run-up needed to clear it.

    We of the THR persuasion should not perpetuate the myth that quitting tobacco is difficult. We are not sea squirts attached to the anti-tobacco/anti-nicotine rock and being force-fed its solutions. It is not in our interests to perpetuate such myths, though it could be seen as being in the interests of those in the anti-tobacco camp. After all, if smokers came to know that it was not difficult to quit, they might do so and put those employed to be anti-tobacco out of work.

  • Delaware 22nd State to Pass Recreational Marijuana Bill

    Delaware 22nd State to Pass Recreational Marijuana Bill

    Credit: Mehaniq41

    Despite his opposition to the bills, Delaware Gov. John Carney on Friday said he would let two bills that legalize marijuana and create a recreational industry become law without his signature.

    He said he is standing down from his opposition to recreational weed that put him at odds with his party.

    Delaware is the 22nd state to legalize recreational marijuana, marking a milestone in President Joe Biden’s home state after a nearly decades-long fight by advocates and Democrats to loosen restrictions on marijuana.

    Carney, in a statement, said he still believes legalizing weed is “not a step forward.”

    “I want to be clear that my views on this issue have not changed,” the governor said in a statement, reports USA Today.

    Carney said he could not sign the bills because of his concerns about the consequences recreational marijuana will have on children’s health, as well as roadway safety. Along with Delaware House Speaker Pete Schwartzkopf, the governor is the rare Democrat to oppose weed legalization.

    Marijuana, in the quantity of personal use, becomes legal starting Sunday. Delawareans will be allowed to smoke joints, eat gummies and consume weed as they wish in private. It will still be illegal to consume marijuana in public, and employers are still allowed to have a zero-tolerance policy. Recreational weed will not be available for purchase in the state for at least 16 months.

    The Delaware General Assembly in March passed two marijuana-related bills: House Bill 1 legalizes the “personal use quantity” of marijuana, which varies by cannabis form, for people ages 21 and older. This is defined as 1 ounce or less of leaf marijuana, 12 grams or less of concentrated cannabis, or cannabis products containing 750 milligrams or less of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol.

    The second bill, House Bill 2, creates and regulates the recreational marijuana industry in Delaware. Within 16 months of the legislation going into effect, the state will distribute 30 retail licenses through a competitive bidding process.

    There will be a marijuana-control enforcement fee of 15 percent on recreational sales. This money, lawmakers say, will create grants and services that focus on restorative justice and reducing the state’s prison population.

    Last year, Carney vetoed a bill to legalize marijuana that the legislature sent to his desk. He said at the time that the law wasn’t in “the best interest of the state” despite the issue’s popularity within his own party.

  • Australia: Increase in Vapor Taxes Boost Black Market

    Australia: Increase in Vapor Taxes Boost Black Market

    Credit: Yehuda

    When Australia’s government opted to increase taxes on tobacco to curb smoking, Deakin University senior criminology lecturer James Martin predicted it would trigger a mammoth black market.

    In 2013, tobacco taxes increased by 12.5 percent and continued to increase each year, according to ABC News

    “The purpose behind that was there’s good evidence from around the world that increasing tobacco prices is a really good way to get people to quit,” Martin said.

    “It’s been quite effective in that. But we’re starting to encounter problems with this policy.”

    Martin said that increased tobacco taxes had fast-tracked the uptake of vaping in Australia while the black market tobacco industry had boomed.

    Black market vendors could sell tobacco for about half the price of regulated markets and had begun to include nicotine vapes in their offerings.

    Martin said this was a consequence of supply and demand.

    “If you’re a smoker who has been priced out of having access to legal cigarettes, you still want to consume that nicotine,” he said.

    “You can either steal cigarettes, or you can access the black market to cigarettes, or you can access the black market for vaping.”

  • FDA, Adams Have Opposing Views on Vaping and Covid

    FDA, Adams Have Opposing Views on Vaping and Covid

    Credit: Kawee

    In the last few weeks, numerous sources have suggested vaping could be a risk factor for either contracting or increasing the severity of COVID-19. These reports are almost entirely based on the speculation from anti-vaping advocates, who rarely receive significant pushback, writes Guy Bentley, director of Consumer Freedom for the Reason Foundation.

    Appearing on NBC’s Today Show on March 23, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams postulated, without evidence, that vaping could be the reason young people may be at higher risk from COVID-19 than previously thought. “There are theories that it could be because we know we have a higher proportion of people in the United States and also in Italy who vape,” said Adams.

    But [on April 16] the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) told Bloomberg News, “E-cigarette use can expose the lungs to toxic chemicals, but whether those exposures increase the risk of COVID-19 is not known.”

    While seemingly anodyne, the statement differs significantly from those of Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Volkow, recently wrote in the Annals of Internal Medicine that vapers could be at high risk for coronavirus.

    Similarly, last week, Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey went so far to issue an advisory warning that vaping could worsen the spread of COVID-19. And last month, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio claimed, “If you are a smoker or a vaper that does make you more vulnerable.”

    Following an apparently unclear email exchange with an FDA official, Bloomberg News published a story with the headline: “Vaping Could Compound Health Risks Tied to Virus, FDA Says,” that prompted Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller and 12 public health experts to write to the FDA to complain. The signatories warned the FDA that if its communications are “arbitrary and ill-conceived, spreading fear and confusion with little scientific basis and unpredictable consequences, then it would be better if the FDA and its media spokespeople did not comment further at this time.”

    Thankfully, the FDA finally appears to be taking this advice seriously. There is currently no evidence from anywhere in the world showing vapers to be at higher risk for COVID-19, Bentley writes in his editorial.

    The Science Media Research Center recently released statements from public health experts to help reporters understand what we do know about smoking, vaping, and COVID-19. “There is no evidence that vaping increases the risk of infection or progression to severe conditions of COVID-19,” said Dr. Caitlin Notley. She added that since switching from smoking to vaping improves cardiovascular and respiratory conditions, smokers who switch “might be expected to have a better prognosis if infected by COVID-19.”

    Similar to last year’s outbreak of lung illnesses that were initially wrongly associated with conventional e-cigarettes, but later found to be the result of adulterated black market marijuana products, much of the communication around vaping and COVID-19 is targeted at young people in an effort to get them to stop vaping.

    The Campaign for Tobacco Free-Kids (CTFK) and Parents Against Vaping Electronic Cigarettes (PAVE) has consistently promoted stories linking vaping and the coronavirus. On April 15, for example, they even promoted a campaign to tell the White House that vape shops are not essential businesses.

    “There is growing concern among public health experts that e-cigarettes can put users at greater risk for serious complications from COVID-19, these products are addicting our kids, and they have not been proven to help smokers quit,” says CTFK.

    The statement is disingenuous. E-cigarettes have been proven beyond any reasonable doubt to be far safer than combustible cigarettes and consistently shown to help smokers quit. Italy, Spain, France, and Switzerland are keeping their vape shops open because they recognize the public health benefit of ensuring access to safer alternatives to cigarettes.

    It’s time for anti-vaping groups to stick to the facts and stop spreading fear and misinformation about a product that is saving millions of lives both in the U.S. and across the globe. Stopping kids from vaping is undoubtedly a noble goal, but it’s not an excuse for misleading the public in ways that could prevent smokers from switching to a dramatically safer product.