Category: Flavors

  • An Error in Judgment

    An Error in Judgment

    A new Yale University study shows that flavor bans cause an increase in underage smoking.

    By Maria Verven

    A new study by the Yale School of Public Health suggests that San Francisco’s ban on sales of flavored tobacco products may have substantially increased smoking among minors. When San Francisco voters approved a ban on the sale of flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes and flavored e-liquids in 2018, public health groups prematurely celebrated another “win” in their battle to reduce teenage vaping.

    Now advocates of the ban must come to terms with the fact that the flavor ban, and most likely similar flavor bans around the world, are inextricably tied to significant increases in teenage smoking rates. According to the study, the odds that high school students would start smoking conventional cigarettes doubled in San Francisco’s school district after the ban was put into effect when compared to districts that didn’t implement a flavor ban, even when adjusting for individual demographics and other tobacco policies.

    A Threat to Public Health

    Published in JAMA Pediatrics in May 2021, the sole author of the study, Abigail Friedman, associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Yale School of Public Health, said the study is the first to assess how complete flavor bans affect youth smoking habits. “These findings suggest a need for caution,” she said. “Even if it is well-intentioned, a law that increases youth smoking poses a threat to public health.”

    Before the ban was implemented, smoking rates in school districts in and around San Francisco were on the decline. Using data on over 95,000 youth from the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System’s 2011–2019 school district surveys, Friedman compared trends in smoking rates in San Francisco versus other districts. The findings revealed a glaringly large discrepancy after the flavor ban went into effect. In 2019, San Francisco’s smoking rates rose to more than twice the average of school districts without a flavor ban. In those districts, smoking rates among youth continued to fall.

    E-cigarettes—and particularly those with flavors—have been the most popular tobacco product among U.S. youth since at least 2014. “Some kids who vape choose e-cigarettes over combustible tobacco products because of the flavors,” Friedman said. “For these individuals, banning flavors may remove their primary motivation for choosing vaping over smoking, pushing some of them back toward conventional cigarettes.”

    Michael Siegel, professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at Boston University School of Public Health, said society is at a critical juncture with regard to youth smoking. “It has plummeted to record lows and on top of that, a culture of vaping has completely replaced the culture of smoking,” he said. “The policies enacted in the next year could likely decide what happens next.”

    Huge Policy Implications

    Credit: JAMA Pediatrics

    The results of the Yale study should have huge implications for other states and even other countries when deciding to ban flavored vapes. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, five states—California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island—have implemented laws banning flavored electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS), and at least 310 localities have passed restrictions on menthol cigarettes and/or flavored tobacco products (including e-liquids), although these laws vary widely.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration implemented a partial ban on the sale of flavored closed-system e-cigarette products in January 2020. The FDA ban exempts menthol and tobacco flavor as well as open tank vaping systems, which tend to be sold in vape shops where age restrictions are more often enforced.

    Members of Congress have been pressuring acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock to ban all flavored e-cigarettes, maintaining that flavors are attracting youth to ENDS products. Woodcock has not indicated whether the agency has plans to ban or otherwise limit the sale of flavored vapes, but a decision could be made this fall.

    When asked to comment on the trend that youth use of cigarettes was declining while their use of ENDS products was on the rise, former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said the trends are not acceptable, even if they are moving in a more positive direction of reduced overall use of tobacco products. “Even if kids are using ENDS [products] instead of cigarettes—and that migration in part accounts for the decline in youth [combustible] cigarette use—that’s still not an acceptable trade,” he said.

    Clive Bates, a tobacco harm reduction expert and former director of Action on Smoking and Health U.K., called this argument outrageous, adding that just because a regulatory agency believes young people should not smoke or vape does not mean that is how it plays out in the real world. “Public health is about dealing with the world as you find it—not giving instructions to people who are not listening, uninterested in your views and unimpressed by your authority,” said Bates. “But that doesn’t mean a regulator is absolved of responsibility for the consequences (good or bad) of its actions.”

    Since Gottlieb essentially said that the FDA doesn’t care if vaping is helping to reduce smoking, Bates says the FDA is ignoring a big public health benefit that has been a goal of U.S. policy for decades. “The dangerous corollary is [that] the FDA doesn’t care if their anti-vaping measures increase smoking among adolescents. That’s what is so despicable about this lofty attitude—it’s an indifference to the group most at risk,” Bates said. “Yet the FDA doesn’t care if vaping works as an alternative to smoking for adolescents—and this is deeply unethical.”

    Generally, regulators do not allow adolescent experimentation to bend adult society and legitimate choices out of shape, especially if these are beneficial to adults, according to Bates. “It should not be taken as a given that adult products that appeal to adolescents should be banned. For many, it is part of being a teenager to sample the forbidden fruits of adulthood,” Bates explains. “We don’t respond to youth experimentation by banning other potentially harmful adult products like alcohol or cannabis just because adolescents use them,” Bates said. “Though it has risen sharply, vaping is not out of the ordinary compared to the prevalence of other risk behaviors. But crucially, it does not actually pose much risk.”

    Decisions That Kill

    In June, Health Canada admitted in a regulatory impact statement that its intended flavor ban could lead to an increase in the smoking rate. David Sweanor, an industry expert and chair of the advisory board for the Centre for Health, Law, Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa, said that the Health Canada statement is basically saying Canadian regulators know they are going to do something that kills Canadians.

    “Countries that simply allow alternatives, even without actively facilitating substitution, are seeing dramatic declines in cigarette sales,” Sweanor said, citing Japan, where cigarette sales over the past five years declined at a very rapid pace—far greater than declines in other countries, including the U.S. “I think the biggest constraint on progress is a lack of understanding of the magnitude of substitution effects. To dramatically reduce the use of lethal cigarettes, we need products that are less hazardous and evidence that consumers will switch to them in sufficient numbers to justify substitution as a policy intervention.”

    Sweanor said efforts that show the extent of substitution effects are blocked by the absence of funding for such research, obstruction from the anti-vaping moralists and those pursuing a “tobacco-free world” agenda. He also believes that tobacco companies may be reluctant to release sales and consumer research data that would bolster policies designed to undermine their lucrative cigarette business. “Jurisdictions that allow viable alternatives to cigarettes, where such products are as accessible as cigarettes and consumers aren’t given misleading information on relative risks, will see far more rapid declines in smoking,” Sweanor said.

    Friedman said the findings from her study strongly suggest that policymakers should be careful not to inadvertently push minors into using the more harmful product. When asked to suggest an alternative policy, she suggested that states consider restricting all tobacco product sales to adult-only (21-plus) retailers. “This would substantively reduce adolescents’ access to tobacco products at convenience stores and gas stations without increasing incentives to choose more lethal combustible products over noncombustible options like e-cigarettes,” she said. 

    Sweanor added that good policies are contagious and would be replicated. “I am confident that science and rationality combined with consumer advocacy will ultimately win,” he said. “Unfortunately, those opposing such policies can cause lengthy delays, which can result in a tragic and avoidable loss of life.”

    Science, Reason and Humanism

    Abigail Friedman, PhD

    Seigel says that there is hope that the Yale study impacts future decisions regarding flavor bans; however, the mainstream anti-tobacco groups are not going to publicize the study because it goes against their preordained conclusions. “If flavor bans are widely adopted, I suspect that many youth who are experimenting with vaping will switch over to cigarette smoking and some will use THC vapes off the black market,” he said. “In contrast, with sensible policies that restrict e-cigarette availability to youth while allowing adult smokers to continue to access them, I think we could drive youth smoking pretty much into the ground—perhaps to a level from which it could never recover.”

    Bates questioned how regulators and lawmakers alike could continue with confidence in implementing flavor bans after seeing the results of the Yale study. He added that he seriously questions whether legislators will admit that the ban was a bad idea and reverse course.

    “It may put the brakes on some of the worst policy mistakes,” he said. “It’s what many of us have been saying should be expected from a flavor ban. But legislators hate to admit they were wrong, so it will probably lead to calls for tougher enforcement and anti-smoking campaigns rather than realizing that the whole idea is wrong.”

    In jurisdictions where viable alternatives to combustible cigarettes are made available, data has shown that the rates of combustible cigarette smoking among youth and young adults is plummeting, according to Sweanor. “More importantly, we are seeing longer term cigarette smokers whose lives are truly on the line, substituting low-risk alternatives,” he said. “People’s response to research depends on motivations. There is a very long and frustrating history of reduced-risk alternatives to cigarettes being attacked by those on a moralist quest to rid the world of nicotine.”

    Vaping products are attacked based on accusations about formaldehyde, popcorn lung, e-cigarette or vaping use-associated lung injury (EVALI), cognitive impairments and a seemingly endless list of other supposed hazards, Sweanor explained, adding that these arguments are ultimately shown to be meritless, but vaping opponents never admit to being wrong.

    “Such behaviors are hallmarks of conspiracy theorists and those seeking to use the power of the state to impose their moral views on the behavior of others. But where lawmakers are open to science, reason and humanism, studies such as this … [Yale study] are very important,” said Sweanor. “Public health breakthroughs are possible when rational lawmakers get past the panics caused by the moralists. We are staring an historically significant public health breakthrough in the face. The sooner lawmakers recognize this, the sooner we can relegate cigarettes to history’s ashtray.”

    The original “Vaping Vamp,” Maria Verven owns Verve Communications, a PR and marketing firm specializing in the vapor industry.

  • Group of 31 States Wants FDA to Ban Most E-Liquid Flavors

    Group of 31 States Wants FDA to Ban Most E-Liquid Flavors

    A coalition of 31 U.S. states and territories has penned a letter the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to asking the agency to ban all flavors other than tobacco, limit nicotine levels and restrict the marketing of all electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) products. The group wants the regulations to also apply to oral nicotine products such as pouches, gum and lozenges.

    Credit: Balint Radu

    Led by New York Attorney General Letitia James, the group’s letter to the FDA argues that the FDA must address the epidemic of youth use of ENDS products by imposing restrictions and age verifications on traditional and digital marketing tactics aimed towards youth, according to a press release. The group claims that e-cigarettes and oral nicotine products have not received marketing authorization from the FDA, as required by federal law.

    “Flavored nicotine products attract kids to dangerous, habit-forming products that only jeopardize their health,” said James. “New York has taken important steps to protect our kids by banning non-tobacco flavored vapor products and limiting the sale of e-cigarettes, but the FDA must also do its part to curb the youth nicotine epidemic. The health and wellbeing of our kids is our top priority and the federal government must act now.”

    The FDA must make a decision by Sept. 9 on whether to allow nicotine products to stay on the market through its premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) pathway for any ENDS product that submitted the application by Sept. 9, 2020. The group’s proposed restrictions would require the FDA to deny approval for most products.

    The coalition argues that banning candy, mint, fruit, and menthol flavors, is essential to eliminating the appeal of the products to youth consumers. Other signatories to the letter are the attorneys general of Idaho, Illinois, Nebraska, North Carolina, and Tennessee. Additional states joining the letter include Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Guam, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.

    James has a long history of challenging the ENDS industry. In April 2019, she led a coalition of seven states in urging the FDA to take stronger action in addressing “the scourge of e-cigarette use among youths” by taking proposed measures such as strengthening guidance, beginning enforcement earlier and banning online sales of e-cigarettes.

    Later that year, James filed a lawsuit against the electronic cigarette company JUUL Labs for deceptive and misleading marketing of its e-cigarettes, which “contributed to the ongoing youth vaping epidemic in New York state.” In December 2020, James ordered dozens of retailers across New York state to immediately stop selling e-cigarette products to underage customers and to stop selling flavored vaping products in violation of New York state law.

    Several recent studies have found that banning flavored vaping products boosts sales of combustible cigarettes and youth use. If vapor product sales were restricted to tobacco flavors, one-third of U.S. vapers between the ages of 18 and 34 would switch to smoking combustible cigarettes, according to at least three known studies.

  • Canadian Vaping Group Wants End to Flavor Ban Proposal

    Canadian Vaping Group Wants End to Flavor Ban Proposal

    The Canadian government has proposed restrictions on flavored vape products, which Health Canada acknowledges will result in increased combustible cigarette smoking. The justification for the flavor ban is that flavor restrictions will lessen youth vaping rates, according to the Canadian Vaping Association (CVA). However, youth rates are already in decline.

    Credit: Kristina Blokhin

    The Canadian Tobacco and Vaping Survey, 2020, found that youth vaping has declined since 2019. Currently, youth daily vaping is 4.7 percent and Health Canada expects the recently implemented nicotine ceiling will further reduce use and experimentation.

    “Youth daily vaping and addiction rates are actually quite low and expected by tobacco control experts to continue to decline. Generally, youth vaping rates are discussed using data on the amount of youth that have tried vaping over the past 30 days,” said Darryl Tempest, executive director of the CVA. “This is a poor metric to base regulation on because it represents experimentation and not habitual use. Young people that try vaping once at a party are included in this figure. These surveys are also misleading because they include age of majority respondents. If these respondents were excluded from the survey, daily vaping among minors is around 2 percent.”

    In a press release, Tempest stated that if other adult products were regulated consistently with the same concern as past 30-day vape use, both cannabis and alcohol would require severe restrictions, as both daily and past 30-day use prevalence are greater than nicotine vaping.

    “Alcohol is considerably more harmful than nicotine vaping and despite its use being significantly more prevalent than vaping among youth, flavor restrictions have not been considered. This is likely because like vaping, youth are not drinking for flavors,” Tempest states. “Canada has set a goal to reduce tobacco use prevalence to 5 percent or less by 2035. Restricting flavors will push thousands of vapers back to smoking and jeopardize current smoking reduction targets. The CVA calls on Health Canada to forgo the flavor ban and instead focus on proven methods such as increased enforcement and education programs.”

  • Columbia, Missouri Considers Flavored E-Liquid Ban

    Columbia, Missouri Considers Flavored E-Liquid Ban

    City council members in Columbia, Missouri will review a report from the Missouri Board of Health concerning banning flavored vaping products in an effort “to reduce the number of youth vaping in Boone County.”

    Credit: Spirit of America

    According to an agenda memo, the Board of Health began studying the issue of youth vaping and its impact on mental and physical health in October 2019. Now, the board has sent the report to council, requesting assistance to prevent teen vaping, according to ABC17 News.

    The report details three recommendations that could help decrease youth vaping, including zoning restrictions on vape shops, since vape shops can currently operate near schools. Health officials also recommend a ban on flavored vaping products since currently e-cigarettes are “sold in over 15,000 flavors.”

    The board is also recommending the council explore higher taxes on vaping products to increase the cost and hopefully reduce use by youth. Multiple studies have found that flavor bans actually boost youth use of tobacco and vaping products.

    No vote is expected on the report Monday night.

  • Another Study Finds Flavor Bans Would Boost Smoking

    Another Study Finds Flavor Bans Would Boost Smoking

    Photo: kurgu128

    If vapor product sales were restricted to tobacco flavors, one-third of U.S. vapers between the ages of 18 and 34 would switch to smoking combustible cigarettes, according to a new study in Nicotine & Tobacco Research.

     The study analyzed data from February to May 2020 and looked at 2,159 young adults in Atlanta, Boston, Minneapolis, Oklahoma City, San Diego and Seattle, examining support for e-cigarette sales restrictions and the perceived impact of flavor and vaping bans.

     This study precedes the FDA’s impending Sept. 9 deadline for premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) decisions, which could potentially take most vapor products off the market.

    The FDA’s deadline will be “like watching an unstoppable object hit an immovable wall,” said Charles Gardner, executive director of INNCO, a global nonprofit supporting the rights of adults using safer nicotine products. “The FDA must know flavor bans will increase teen, young adult and older adult smoking.”

    “In general, the FDA does not comment on specific studies but evaluates them as part of the body of evidence to further our understanding about a particular issue and assist in our mission to protect public health,” an FDA spokesperson said.

    Two other recent studies showed similar results. A study in JAMA Pediatrics showed that following San Francisco’s flavor ban, teens were more likely to smoke than those in other school districts. A different study in Nicotine & Tobacco Research shows that teens who vape would be smoking cigarettes if vapes hadn’t become available.

    “All hell will break loose if [the FDA] authorize[s] flavors as ‘appropriate for the protection of public health,’” said Gardner. “The Truth Initiative and the Bloomberg-funded Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids have staked their reputations on the public health benefits of flavor bans. And many key leaders in the U.S. Congress believe them.”

  • D.C. City Council Passes Flavor Ban, Excludes Hookah

    D.C. City Council Passes Flavor Ban, Excludes Hookah

    The City Council for the District of Columbia (D.C.) voted Tuesday to ban the sale of flavored vaping and other tobacco products in the District, including menthol cigarettes. It was the council’s second vote in favor of the legislation and it now heads to the desk of Mayor Muriel E. Bowser, who supports the ban for health reasons. She has stated that she would sign it into law.

    Credit: JHVE Photo

    The 8-to-5 vote came after a lengthy debate in which legislators who opposed the ban — and even some who favored it — raised concerns that the law could create opportunities for Black smokers to be harrassed by police, and that the city would be unfairly targeting a smoking choice preferred by Black residents, according to the Washington Post. The Council voted 9-3-1 during the first reading at the June 15 legislative session.

    In an attempt to avoid police interactions based on the use of flavored vapor products, the council approved a change to the bill Tuesday saying that the law does not give the city’s police authority to act on their own to enforce the vaping ban. The Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, which can inspect D.C. stores to make sure they are not selling illegal products, could still call in police for assistance.

    The council carved out one exception — any hookah bars in the city which already have an exemption from the city’s ban on indoor smoking in restaurants will be grandfathered in, and can continue offering flavored hookah for use on their own premises.

    The Biden administration has vowed to eventually outlaw such flavored tobacco products, including menthol, nationwide. The council originally considered banning only e-cigarette products before expanding the bill to include menthol, a step that several legislators opposed.

    “If the question is, ‘Is menthol bad for us?’ the answer certainly is yes. But if the question is, ‘Is smoking bad for us?’ the answer also is yes,” said Councilmember Robert White, who voted against the ban. “In the original bill, we were trying to get at things that were targeted toward youth, flavored items. Menthol to me seems like a different category…. I’m seeing this as paternalistic.”

    The District joins the state of Massachusetts and some other cities across the country in banning menthol cigarettes, which are popular with Black smokers of all ages, alongside other flavored tobacco products such as the candy- and fruit-flavored e-cigarettes that advocates say are targeted toward inducing teenagers to smoke.

  • Health Canada: Flavor Ban Could Boost Smoking

    Health Canada: Flavor Ban Could Boost Smoking

    Photo: jedsadabodin

    Health Canada has made a “startling admission” that its recent policy to ban the sale of flavored vapor products could contribute to a rise in cigarette consumption, reports Filter, a publication owned and operated by The Influence Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates for rational and compassionate approaches to drug use, drug policy and human rights.

    Into its regulatory impact analysis statement on the intended flavor ban, Health Canada acknowledges that its legislation could lead to an increase in smoking, according to Filter.

    “It is anticipated that some dual users who currently use flavored vaping products would not substitute their purchases with tobacco[-flavored] and mint/menthol-flavored vaping products. They would choose to purchase more cigarettes,” the statement reads.

    “The statement is very direct. It’s basically saying, ‘We’re Health Canada, and we’re going to do something that kills Canadians,’” said David Sweanor, an industry expert and chair of the Advisory Board for the Centre for Health, Law, Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa.

    “The statement is very direct. It’s basically saying, ‘We’re Health Canada, and we’re going to do something that kills Canadians.”

    Matt Culley, a board member of the U.S.-based CASAA, a consumer advocacy nonprofit that promotes smoke-free alternatives to combustible tobacco, said, “The fact that a government can brazenly admit their policy will lead to more smoking and death is wild. It really goes to show how demonized vaping remains.”

    The policy appears to be at odds with Canada’s intention to reduce its smoking rate to 5 percent by 2030.

    Our policies have not aligned with the country’s goals,” Darryl Tempest, the executive director and chief advocate of the Canadian Vaping Association (CVA), told Filter. “It is not a public policy that relates to adults or harm reduction or small businesses.”

    The country amended its tobacco laws to include vaping products in 2018, and some Canadian provinces have already enacted their own flavor bans.

  • Lawmakers Press Acting FDA Chief on Flavored Vapes

    Lawmakers Press Acting FDA Chief on Flavored Vapes

    The acting US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Janet Woodcock on Wednesday was pushed by members of the U.S. Congress to ban all flavored e-cigarettes, saying the sweet and fruity flavors are attracting too many children and teens.

    Credit: Kurgu 128

    However, Woodcock would not assure lawmakers on whether the agency plans to ban or otherwise limit the sale of flavored vapes later this year. The agency has until September 9 to decide. When pressed multiple times over the course of the hearing, Woodcock would not commit to denying premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) for flavored vaping products at this time, according to CNN.

    “While I can’t predict the future, I think that might be likely. We also would have to, regardless, limit advertising and sales in targeting children and other practices,” Woodcock said, adding that the FDA will look at the scientific evidence. “As I have said already, I can’t prejudge the scientific,” she said, before being cut off.

    During the House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing, Rep. Katie Porter asked if the FDA banned all flavored e-cigarettes, would less kids continue to vape, among those who have started. “If kids have the choices of any tasty flavor, they’re going to go for it, and I’m speaking to you from experience here as a mom of three school-aged kids,” Porter said. “If there were no watermelon snow cones, my kids are happy with blue raspberry. No blue raspberry? They’ll take mango. No mango? They’ll take strawberry. But if their only choice was a brown, tobacco-flavored snow cone, they are going to walk away.”

    Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), chairman of the Oversight Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy, said after the hearing he felt Woodcock would do as Democratic members of Congress wished. “I am more optimistic than ever that Commissioner Woodcock will do the right thing and deny the premarket tobacco product applications (PMTA) for all flavored vaping products, and all high-nicotine vaping products,” Krishnamoorthi said in a statement.

    Woodcock also suggested at the hearing that e-cigarette manufacturer Juul Labs Inc. played a significant role in creating a youth vaping epidemic. When asked if Juul was “the e-cigarette company most responsible for creating this epidemic.” Woodcock replied that it does “appear” to be the case.

    Woodcock would also not commit to removing menthol-flavored e-cigarette products from the US market, even though she said she believes menthol flavoring could heighten the effects of nicotine.

    “I was so pleased that you banned menthol combustible cigarettes, which was the right thing to do,” Krishnamoorthi said during the hearing. “Will you pledge to clear the market of menthol e-cigarettes?”

    “I can’t prejudge our decisions,” Woodcock replied.

  • House Committee to Question Acting FDA Leader Today

    House Committee to Question Acting FDA Leader Today

    Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock is set to testify before a House subcommittee on Wednesday morning about youth vaping. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, chair of the panel, plans to press Woodcock to do more to stop kids from vaping and becoming addicted to nicotine.

    “We still have a youth vaping epidemic, even amidst our pandemic,” said Krishnamoorthi, in a story for Yahoo Finance.

    Krishnamoorthi has been an advocate for cracking down on the vaping industry over the past several years. In 2019, amid an outbreak of vaping-related illness linked to black market THC products not nicotine, there was bipartisan support for a crackdown — leading the Trump administration to issue a vaping flavor ban in an effort to curb teenage use.

    The ban covered flavors that critics argued targeted children — like fruit, mint and candy flavors — but allowed menthol and tobacco flavors to remain legal. The ban only applied to cartridges or pre-filled pod devices, like the ones sold by Juul, not disposable e-cigarettes. Some critics argued the move wasn’t enough.

    “You’ve got to get rid of all the flavors. Secondly, you have to make sure that disposable cigarettes are subject to the same flavor ban that all other products are subject to — and then third, we have to regulate the nicotine content,” said Krishnamoorthi. “These vapes that are currently on the market are so addictive.”

  • Canada Planning to Ban Flavored Vapes by 2022

    Canada Planning to Ban Flavored Vapes by 2022

    Canada said Friday it intends to ban most flavored vaping products in an effort to deter young people from consuming electronic cigarettes. According to the Canada Gazette, a weekly publication that outlines pending government regulatory orders (much like the Federal Register in the U.S.), the Liberal government said it would restrict e-cigarette flavors to tobacco, mint and menthol. Fruit flavors, like cherry, melon and mango, would be prohibited.

    Canada flag
    Credit: Toptop54

    Restricting fruit-based flavors and the use of sweeteners as an ingredient are expected to make e-cigarettes less appealing to younger people, the government said, according to press release. Canadian data, as presented in the Gazette, indicated vaping rates among youth remain high. Further, over 60% of youth aged 15 years to 19 years used fruit-flavored e-cigarettes, versus 40% for those 20 and older who vape.

    The government said Canada’s proposals would be among the strongest in the developed world in curbing vaping, and generally in line with Denmark’s rules on flavored vaping products. The government said stakeholders can submit thoughts on the rules until Sept. 2, although Ottawa is eyeing implementation starting in 2022.

    In Canada Gazette, Part II that will be published on July 23, 2021, Health Canada is announcing the new Nicotine Concentration in Vaping Products Regulations (NCVPR), which set a maximum nicotine concentration of 20 mg/mL for vaping products marketed in Canada. They also prohibit the packaging and sale of vaping products if the nicotine concentration stated on the package exceeds 20 mg/mL.

    The NCVPR prescribe a laboratory method, ISO 20714 E-liquid – Determination of nicotine, propylene glycol and glycerol in liquids used in electronic nicotine delivery devices – Gas chromatographic method, for determining the nicotine concentration of a vaping substance. Health Canada will use this method to determine compliance with the maximum nicotine concentration.

    As well, the NCVPR amend the Vaping Products Labelling and Packaging Regulations, which until now allowed vaping products to contain up to 66 mg/mL of nicotine; this limit will now only apply to products intended for export. Vaping products authorized under the Food and Drugs Act (FDA) are not subject to these regulations.

    The NCVPR goes into force on July 8, 2021. Retailers have until July 23, 2021 to comply with these Regulations.

    Enforcement actions to address non-compliance may include issuing warning letters, seizures, and/or prosecutions. The penalties for not complying with the NCVPR are set out under Part VI of the Tobacco and Vaping Products Act.

    Proposal to further restrict vaping product flavours

    Flavored vaping products are highly appealing to youth. In Canada Gazette, Part I to be published on July 19, 2021, Health Canada is proposing measures that would:

    • further restrict the promotion of flavors to tobacco, mint, menthol or a combination of mint and menthol (mint/menthol), including through indications or illustrations on packaging;
    • prohibit all sugars and sweeteners as well as most flavoring ingredients, with limited exceptions to impart tobacco and mint/menthol flavors; and
    • prescribe sensory attributes standards to prevent a sensory perception other than one that is typical of tobacco or of mint/menthol.

    Flavors other than tobacco, as well as sugars and sweeteners in vaping products, increase product appeal, decrease perception of harm and heighten intention to try or use vaping or tobacco products. Youth also tend to perceive flavored vaping products, such as fruit and candy, as less harmful to health than tobacco-flavored vaping products.

    Health Canada is aware of the important role flavors can play in helping people who smoke transition from smoking. The proposed measures would leave some flavor options for adults who smoke and wish to transition, or have transitioned to vaping, which is a less harmful source of nicotine than cigarettes for those who switch completely to vaping.