Tag: regulation

  • Lawmakers Continue to Urge FDA to Finish PMTA Reviews

    Lawmakers Continue to Urge FDA to Finish PMTA Reviews

    Credit: Adobe

    U.S. lawmakers are urging the Food and Drug Administration to wrap up its review of pending e-cigarette premarket tobacco product applications, reports Law360.

    In a letter to FDA Commissioner Robert Califf, 50 members of Congress requested the agency finalize its review of pending applications for e-cigarette products; deny applications for all nontobacco-flavored e-cigarette products, including menthol; and utilize the enforcement tools that have been given to the agency to remove all synthetic nicotine products from the market, including those with pending applications.

    The lawmakers’ call comes after the FDA failed to meet a court-ordered deadline of Sept. 9, 2021, to complete its review of all pending e-cigarette applications submitted to the agency. In its most recent filings with the court, the FDA has indicated that it will not be able to finalize its review of products with the largest market share until December 2023.

    “FDA’s repeated delays in removing flavored e-cigarettes from the market is putting children’s health at risk,” said Colorado Representative Diana DeGette in a statement. “FDA needs to step up its enforcement of these harmful products and get them off our store shelves now. Every day that these products remain on the market, the more harm they cause to young people’s health.”

    While the FDA has completed its review of many e-cigarette products, it has not yet completed its review of thousands of pending applications—including those for popular products manufactured by Juul Labs, Reynolds Vapor Co. and Smok.

    The lawmakers urged the agency to complete its review of all its pending applications no later than Dec. 31, 2023.

  • Ector County Jail Sells $19,000 in Vapes in One Month

    Ector County Jail Sells $19,000 in Vapes in One Month

    Credit: Ye Jinghan

    Authorities in Ector County, Texas started selling e-cigarettes to inmates at their Law Enforcement Center started on May 8th. Jail Captain James Mckinney started with 2,000 vapes. One costs about $14.

    “Regular, menthol, peach, ice peach and then berry. I ordered 400 of each and we were sold out last week,” said Mckinney.

    They were so popular, Mckinney just ordered 4,000 more, according to CBS7.

    In total they’ve made $19,476.50, profiting $11,776.50 on the e-cigarettes in just one month.

    “If you’re making money off the inmates it has to go back to benefit the inmates, whether it be the mattresses I buy for them, the clothes, sheets, anything that benefits them, basketballs,” said Mckinney.

    They’ve only had about 10 inmates alter the products out of the hundreds currently at the jail.

    “If they tamper with them we’ll take them away for 14 days, if they tamper again with them, we’ll take them away for 21 days, if they tamper a third time then we’ll take them away until we say they can get another one,” said Mckinney.

  • ANDS Develops 99 Percent Recyclable Vape Device

    ANDS Develops 99 Percent Recyclable Vape Device

    Fadi Maayta | Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    ANDS has created a disposable vape that is 99.29 percent recyclable, according to Waste Experts, reports UKVIA.

    Slix is constructed of an outer casing made of 100 percent recyclable high-grade cardboard with a biodegradable silicone mouthpiece and end piece.

    “While the analysis carried out by Waste Experts suggests that our single-use vape is highly recyclable, we will continue to work toward zero waste,” said Marina Murphy, senior director of scientific and medical affairs at ANDS. “We aim to build a high rate of recyclability into all our products by using high-quality recyclable materials and simple construction that allows for highly efficient dismantling. This contributes to a fast, efficient overall recycling process, which reduces waste management costs. This in turn helps to keep product prices competitive, creating a win-win for the environment and adult consumers who value our products.”

    “We’re very much on a journey, and by the end of this year, we hope to launch a 100 percent recyclable and recoverable version of Slix, which will reduce the tonnage of waste going to landfill even further,” said Fadi Maayta, president of ANDS. “If these single-use vapes are restricted or banned over environmental fears as is being talked about in some circles—smokers could lose what many believe to be a very convenient, accessible and compelling alternative to conventional cigarettes.”

    ANDS is partnering with Waste Experts to create a recycling program.

  • Flavor Bans for Vapor and Heated Tobacco to Grow

    Flavor Bans for Vapor and Heated Tobacco to Grow

    man holding flavored vape products

    Bans on flavors in vapor and heated tobacco are likely to spread.

    By Barnaby Page

    Flavors are perhaps the biggest battleground of all in e-cigarette regulation—much more so than nicotine strength, for example. That may seem surprising on the surface given the widespread misperceptions of risk associated with nicotine itself (as opposed to smoking), but the underlying reason is revealing. Although occasionally there are other rationales associated with flavor bans (specific harmful ingredients, or a racial dimension in the case of menthol in the United States), nearly always the argument against flavors is a proxy for anxieties over youth vaping.

    To put it another way, if nobody thought that anyone other than adults would use mermaid-flavored caramel candy floss e-liquid, nobody would be very interested in banning it (and in fact, adult usage of these flavors is almost completely overlooked in the debate). It’s because kids use—or, more precisely, are perceived to be attracted by—these flavors that regulators, politicians, pundits and pressure groups pay so much attention to them.

    Underage vaping undoubtedly occurs; this is indisputable. Whether flavors (which in regulatory terms means nontobacco flavors) are in fact a significant driver of this is more debatable. It’s true that young people often use the more exotic flavors, but that doesn’t mean the nicotine users among them wouldn’t vape if those flavors weren’t available.

    Of course, those who are vaping nicotine-free flavored liquids presumably wouldn’t find nicotine-free tobacco-flavored liquid very appealing, and they probably wouldn’t vape at all if their favored flavors were unavailable. But these nicotine-free users are not the main concern.

    Similarly, it’s true that kids say they like the flavors they use. But this is hardly unexpected; nobody would use a flavor they don’t like. Again, it doesn’t conclusively point to what would happen in the absence of flavors, and this is an area where more research is needed—research that will become more viable on a large scale as more and more flavor bans are implemented.

    The results may prove to be unexpected: for example, work by Abigail Friedman at Yale suggests that the San Francisco flavor ban may have pushed young people not toward tobacco-flavored vapes but toward combustibles, and while one research project in one city is of course not the end of the story, it underlines the importance of looking at the real consequences of regulation in this area. If flavor bans do not keep kids away from nicotine, there is little purpose to them.

    For now, though, limiting flavors is rightly or wrongly seen as key to limiting youth vaping, and prohibitions are spreading worldwide—perhaps not as quickly as the heat of the conversation might suggest but steadily nonetheless.

    The United States is in an unusual situation here, partly because of the considerable autonomy enjoyed by sub-national levels of government compared with many other countries and partly because of slow movement by the Food and Drug Administration. There can be almost no doubt that the FDA would like to ban flavors; after all, it has even backed the idea of a menthol ban in combustibles, which is far more contentious than any restrictions on e-cigarette flavors, and seems likely to be preparing to finalize a rule to that effect this fall.

    Where vapor is concerned, there is no formal prohibition as such (though it is always conceivable that the anticipated combustibles ban could in fact cover all tobacco products), but a de facto ban on vapor flavors seems to have been in operation via the premarket tobacco product application (PMTA) process. To put it bluntly, flavored products don’t get through, and indeed this has been formally alleged by R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co. in a case against the FDA, as yet unresolved.

    In this context, it might seem odd that the FDA did grant modified-risk tobacco product (MRTP) status to menthol-flavored IQOS products from Philip Morris back in 2020—MRTP of course being an overt acknowledgment of reduced risk, not merely an authorization to sell like the PMTA. This might reflect the fact that youth usage is much less associated with heated-tobacco products like IQOS than with vapor; in fact, heated tobacco was barely known in the U.S. in 2020, has worldwide generally given rise to much less anxiety over underage use and is generally not found in the more unusual, supposedly youth-friendly flavors. Or it might simply be an anomaly. Either way, the IQOS decision seems unlikely to be any kind of precedent for a softening of FDA attitudes toward flavored vapor.

    In the absence of an official FDA rule, formal regulatory activity against flavored vape products in the United States has most significantly occurred at state level—for example, with bans in California, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island, an almost complete prohibition in Massachusetts and heavy restrictions in Maryland and Utah. Some other states also instituted emergency bans in 2019 that have now ended. There has also been much activity at county and municipal level (most notably in California and Massachusetts and to a lesser extent in Minnesota).

    Elsewhere in the world, again partly reflecting the allocation of powers to national and sub-national governments, there are countrywide bans.

    Among those nations that allow e-cigarettes as a product category but ban flavors, China is potentially the most important given its sheer size. However, the Netherlands—a country where skepticism over vapor in official circles is high—has also received much attention, not least because it could pave the way for other European countries to follow suit. Finland has already passed a bill prohibiting flavors in all inhalable products, and we believe Norway is also likely to enact a vapor flavor ban; Belgium is another possibility, though one we consider less likely.

    Much of the forecasting in this article is drawn from the Tamarind Intelligence Policy Radar, which presents the regulatory situation in more than 50 markets for alternative tobacco products as it is today and as it is projected to be in five years. It monitors more than 150 bills and policies, many of which seek to substantially increase the regulatory burden on novel tobacco and nicotine products. Based on this, other countries where we see a vapor flavor ban as possible include Canada and Argentina, although the latter is a less likely contender.

    Other countries have taken steps toward banning flavors in all alternative products. Nations such as Spain, Belgium, Russia and the Czech Republic have raised concerns about flavors in new tobacco and nicotine products in their policies, which include, for example, national tobacco plans and health strategies. However, it should be noted that we forecast some of these first steps toward a flavor ban to have a low likelihood to medium likelihood of adoption. This may be because the measure has not been a pressing issue for a government faced with elections in the near future, as with Spain, or because the policy has remained stuck in the legislative process for years, as is the case with the bill in Belgium.

    Comprehensive bans like these could be expected to also cover heated tobacco. Some countries, however, may choose to treat it separately; among these, we think a ban is likely in Taiwan and possible in the United States.

    In terms of sheer number of countries, however, by far the most important limitation on heated-tobacco flavors is the European Union ban, which entered into force late last year via a European Commission directive.

    Such directives do not have automatic legal power in all 27 EU member states, but the individual countries are obliged to incorporate them into domestic law, a process known as “transposition,” which must in this case be completed by October (and which also applies to the European Economic Area members Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein). When this is complete (and though the deadline could be missed in some cases, it will almost certainly be completed), heated-tobacco flavors will be banned across most of Europe, leaving the post-Brexit United Kingdom—the most friendly of all European nations toward reduced-risk nicotine products—as the major outlier where flavors are still permitted.

    In this context, the ongoing revision of the EU Tobacco Products Directive (TPD) itself is also noteworthy. It was the 2014 version of the TPD that laid the groundwork for the e-cigarette regulatory frameworks in all EU member states (at that point including the U.K.), for example with limitations on nicotine strength, and with the next incarnation of the directive currently being drawn up, there is at the very least a possibility that it could include a flavor ban for alternative products, including vapor.

    If that happens, it might well be enough to sway undecided countries outside the EU and persuade them to enact their own flavor bans—perhaps even the U.K. It is also possible that, amid environmental concerns about the sudden rise of disposables, “flavor” will become a proxy for “disposable” in exactly the same way it has been for “underage.”

    At the same time, it is always conceivable that some yet unknown nicotine-delivery technology might escape these prohibitions if there are no concerns about youth usage.

    But it is unlikely that bans that do come into force will be reversed, regardless of their outcomes; perception is often as important as reality in regulating this area. Though it hasn’t happened yet, the alternative nicotine products sector may be facing a flavorless future.

    Barnaby Page is the editorial director of Tamarind Intelligence, the publisher of ECigIntelligence, TobaccoIntelligence and CannIntelligence. As a journalist, he has been covering the worldwide reduced-risk nicotine sector since 2014, with a particular focus on public health and regulatory issues.In his current role, he manages Tamarind’s editorial and reporting teams, producing a wide range of nicotine-related content. He previously spent 30 years as a reporter and editor for newspapers, magazines and online services, specializing in technology and business. He is based near London, England.

    Tamarind Intelligence analysts Berta Camps Bisbal and Sergi Riudalbas also contributed research to this article.

  • Group: Debt Ceiling Could Limit U.S. FDA’s Budget

    Group: Debt Ceiling Could Limit U.S. FDA’s Budget

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The proposed debt ceiling budget could stress the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s budget, according to Inside Health Policy.

    The legislation’s nondefense federal funding cap makes it harder for programs like the FDA’s budget to get funding increases, and it could threaten some agencies’ existing funds, according to Steven Grossman, director of the Alliance for a Stronger FDA. “This is never a good situation for agencies whose mission and responsibilities keep expanding each year, as is the case with FDA,” he wrote.

    The Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 caps nondefense federal spending at $704 billion for the next two years. According to Grossman, after taking out funding for Veterans Affairs medical care and appropriations adjustments, the remaining nondefense funds are about $637 billion, which is roughly unchanged from fiscal 2023.

    There is still room to determine how much funding can be specifically allocated to the FDA, though, according to Grossman, despite the FDA’s funding being limited by the macro-budgetary levels determined by the debt ceiling.

    “FDA’s mission and responsibilities are incredibly consequential and visible,” he wrote. “It needs resources to protect public health and safety and to set standards for products that encompass 20 percent of all consumer spending (about $2.7 trillion).”

    The House GOP’s FDA funding bill cleared the Appropriations FDA-agriculture subcommittee last month; it would provide $6.6 billion in total funding with $3.5 billion in flat discretionary funding.

  • Olsen: Rethinking the MRTP Approval Process

    Olsen: Rethinking the MRTP Approval Process

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Rethinking the modified-risk tobacco products approval process.

    By Cheryl K. Olson

    It seemed an excellent test case for a new system. After role-playing a U.S. Food and Drug Administration Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (TPSAC) member, listening to Altria’s presenters rehearse their pitch, that was my impression. I thought that Copenhagen Snuff would likely sail through the modified-risk tobacco product (MRTP) application process.  

    Sold in some form since the 19th century, the product was well understood. From a regulatory perspective, it was comfortably dull. The reduced-harm claim Altria sought to put on Copenhagen’s label seemed indisputably true: “If you smoke, consider this: Switching completely to this product from cigarettes reduces risk of lung cancer.” 

    In February 2019, the TPSAC review panel voted 8-0 that the claim was scientifically accurate. Said panel chair Robin Mermelstein, “I am hearing a consensus that this was an understandable statement. It was clear,” and “I think it is a reasonable place to start in messaging.”   

    Forty-nine months later, the FDA finally authorized Copenhagen Classic Snuff as a MRTP.

    “No tobacco product is safe or ‘FDA approved,’ so those who do not use tobacco products shouldn’t start,” said the director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), Brian King, in the March 2023 press release. “But tobacco products do exist on a spectrum of risk, with those that are smoked having the greatest risk. In this case, the FDA’s scientific review found that if an adult smoker completely switched from cigarettes to this smokeless product, it would reduce their risk of getting lung cancer.” 

    How could it take so long to approve the obvious: that complete switching to a (familiar) smokeless product from cigarettes reduces risk of lung cancer? This invites a fresh critical look at the MRTP process: its origin, utility and potential future.

    Some MRTP History

    The U.S. MRTP application process comes to us courtesy of Section 911 of the 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. It defines “modified-risk tobacco product” as one “sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related disease.” In addition to the usual scientific evidence for reduced health risks, complex studies of consumer perceptions and real-world product use are required. 

    Don’t have an MRTP authorization? Basically, your company can’t say anything on product labeling, advertising or other media “that would be reasonably expected to result in consumers believing that the tobacco product or its smoke may present a lower risk of disease or is less harmful” compared to other products. Or, that product or its smoke has fewer bad things in it. The act also prohibits the use of weasel words like “light,” “mild” or “low.”

    In October 2019, Swedish Match USA’s eight General Snus products were the first ever authorized for sale with a modified-risk claim. “Today’s action demonstrates the viability of the pathway for companies to market specific tobacco products as less harmful to consumers,” read the FDA’s press release, “but only following a thorough scientific evaluation by the FDA.”

    “It was a priority for CTP to demonstrate that the pathway works,” says Jim Solyst, then vice president for federal government affairs at Swedish Match. But this was four years after the same products received FDA marketing authorization (premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs)) and took two rounds of TPSAC review.

    The MRTP process is gobsmackingly costly in time and resources. In a 2018 regulatory document, the FDA estimated that it would receive three MRTP applications per year “and that it will take the applicant 10,000 hours per response to conduct studies and collect the information needed to support an MRTPA.” After all that, the claim is only good for five years. (A new application might lead to an extension.) Also, postmarket surveillance studies are mandated to show how the authorized claim actually affected consumer perception, behavior and health.

    This may be why few companies have even entered the MRTP arena. The last TPSAC meeting to review an application took place in early 2020.

    Only four diverse sets of products had emerged successful: snus from Swedish Match, Philip Morris International’s heat-not-burn IQOS systems and their HeatSticks, very-low nicotine cigarettes from 22nd Century Group and Altria’s snuff. (R.J. Reynolds presented on its Camel Snus to the TPSAC but later withdrew the application.)

    At one point, it was logical that if you got a PMTA, it made sense to consider a MRTP. Now with the slowness of getting a PMTA, I don’t think companies have the MRTP as a vision of the next step.

    Lessons from the Past?

    When does it make sense to consider seeking a claim? “At one point, it was logical that if you got a PMTA, it made sense to consider a MRTP,” says Solyst. “Now with the slowness of getting a PMTA, I don’t think companies have the MRTP as a vision of the next step.”

    Solyst, who is now principal at JMS Scientific Engagement, points to distinctive factors that gave General Snus products an edge with the FDA. These included product-specific long-term studies from Sweden. “They had an incredible amount of human health data and consumer data,” he says.

    The MRTP section of the Tobacco Control Act echoes language from the influential 2001 Institute of Medicine report, Clearing the Smoke: Assessing the Science Base for Tobacco Harm Reduction. That report mentioned Swedish snus multiple times as an example of a potential reduced-exposure product. This, Solyst notes, “did provide a comfort level [for the FDA] to go ahead with an application.”

    Because of these special circumstances, it’s hard to draw firm lessons from Swedish Match’s experience for MRTP wannabes. Nonetheless, Solyst encourages a careful read of the General Snus MRTP decision document: “That indicates what CTP valued in the application.”

    As more products are authorized, patterns for success may become easier to spot, encouraging more companies to try.

    Willie McKinney

    Not So Obvious

    The FDA’s goal is to review and act upon each MRTP application within 360 days of receipt if it contains the required information. While the process may streamline with time, it’s unlikely that approvals will ever be rapid.

    One factor is the FDA culture. Willie McKinney, who served for three years as the industry representative on TPSAC, points to the example of thalidomide. In the early 1960s, Frances Oldham Kelsey famously prevented untold numbers of severe birth defects by questioning a drug application slated for routine approval. “That’s the ideal FDA reviewer,” McKinney says. “‘I saved lives, stopped a bad thing from happening.’”

    McKinney was at times surprised at negative votes on questions posed to TPSAC reviewers about MRTPs. “I came to the conclusion that ‘obvious’ means different things to different people,” he says. In transcripts from past TPSAC meetings, one sees examples of reviewer confusion about how novel products look or work and skepticism about industry-generated data.

    One former staff member at the CTP agreed, saying, “Not knowing the unintended consequences is a biggie.” That person did not feel that politics or bias play a role, however.

    “I have not had anybody say, ‘Hey, delay the review of this.’ It’s usually something that’s unclear,” they said. The involvement of outside reviewers complicates the process: “There are a lot of moving parts.”

    Pluses and Limits  

    From a public health perspective, a plus of the MRTP system is that it gets thoroughly tested information onto product packages and ads. Ideally, this helps people who do and don’t smoke attempt to meaningfully weigh relative risks. 

    “The idea of having a health claim is a good one,” says Solyst. “But it needs to be something that is effective, that results in smokers moving to lower risk products.”

    One problem is that Section 911 limits messaging to a brief statement about reduced risk of disease or exposure to a substance. As a tool to change what people do with nicotine, an MRTP claim is like one of those L-shaped Allen wrenches. It can work well for a simple, specific task.

    But is it adequate for the complex job described in the Copenhagen MRTP press release? By law, the FDA must ensure that the public understands the reduced risk or exposure message used in advertising and labeling. What’s more, they must “understand the significance that information has in the context of total health and in relation to all tobacco-related diseases and health conditions.” That’s a lot to ask from a one-sentence claim.

    Consider this: Strong headwinds of misinformation deter the switch from cigarettes to smokeless. It would be surprising to see large changes in perceptions and behavior intentions from one experimental exposure to a single short statement.

    As Joe Murillo, then senior vice president of regulatory affairs at Altria Client Services, noted in his 2019 presentation to TPSAC, the FDA’s own survey data found that over 90 percent of adults who smoked thought smokeless products were just as or more harmful than cigarettes. Potential harm to nonusers of tobacco is factored into the FDA’s MRTP decisions. Isn’t harm from inaction—of not correcting high-risk misinformation—just as important to consider?

    The Future of MRTPs

    Among other recommendations, the recent report from the Reagan-Udall Foundation for the FDA encourages the CTP to develop a “more clear and predictable framework” for PMTA and MRTP submissions and reviews. This includes “simplifying, standardizing, documenting and publicly disseminating review procedures.” It’s noteworthy that the FDA sought comments on its draft guidance for MRTPs in 2018 but has yet to publish final guidance. 

    An April 2023 letter to FDA Commissioner Robert Califf by a group of distinguished researchers and advocates (including Mermelstein) expands on the Reagan-Udall recommendations. “Introduce a simplified system for evaluating incremental improvements to authorized products so American consumers can benefit sooner from product innovations,” they write. “This should apply to both the PMTA process for authorizations and the MRTP pathway for modified-risk claims. FDA’s processes should encourage pro-health innovation, not obstruct innovation or deny Americans access to the best technologies available worldwide.”

  • WHO: Uganda Holding Firm on Vaping Product Ban

    WHO: Uganda Holding Firm on Vaping Product Ban

    Credit: ATDR

    Uganda is standing firm on its eight-year-long ban on the sale of electronic cigarettes according to the World Health Organization (WHO) Country Representative Yonas Tegegn Woldemariam.

    The Tobacco Control Act 2015 sought to effectively remove vaping products from the Uganda market.

    “Despite Uganda’s high and increasing burden of non-communicable diseases morbidity and mortality rates, one in ten people still smoke cigarettes daily, making the practice an ongoing and dire public health threat. This justifies the Tobacco Control Act and all the other government initiatives to regulate products, including e-cigarettes,” said Yonas.

    Uganda is one of the 35 countries globally where e-cigarettes are banned. The law bans the importation, manufacture, distribution, processing, sale, or offer for sale of e-cigarettes, including nicotine- and non-nicotine-containing e-liquids.

    The WHO agent also cited a retracted 2016 study reported in the Lancet journal that found that people who use or have used e-cigarettes are less likely to stop smoking.

    Even though legal consequences aren’t optimally enforced, it is encouraging to see that there are now comparatively fewer people smoking in public, according to the statement.

    Uganda is a signatory to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which provides countries with evidence-based strategies to address the tobacco epidemic in their national contexts.

    WHO continues to support the Ministry of Health Tobacco control initiatives, including sensitizing communities about the negative impacts of tobacco consumption on health and the environment, and encouraging local farmers to plant food rather than tobacco.

  • Shipping Vapes to Hawaii Could End in Jail Sentence

    Shipping Vapes to Hawaii Could End in Jail Sentence

    Credit: Lost in Midwest

    Shipping e-cigarettes or other tobacco products in Hawaii can land you in jail after Governor Josh Green signed new measures into law today.

    Under the new legislation, a person who knowingly and unlawfully ships vaping and other tobacco products valued at less than $10,000 could face misdemeanor charges.

    Anything valued above $10,000 would be classified as a class C felony.

    The governor said this change will help to better regulate smoking products that enter the state.

    “Tobacco is poison ok and tobacco use continues to be the single most preventable cause of disease that we could deal with, that we can affect when we make good decisions as policymakers, it causes death in the united states, so this is a monumental first step in protecting our keiki from big tobacco,” he said.

    Any business selling vaping products must have a retail tobacco permit from the state. The new law takes effect on July 1st.

  • UK Pediatricians Call for Ban on Disposable Vapes

    UK Pediatricians Call for Ban on Disposable Vapes

    The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) in the UK has called for a ban on disposable e-cigarettes, stating that vapor products can be just as addictive as traditional cigarettes, according to Metro.

    “Since e-cigarettes have only been on sale in the UK since 2007, long-term studies don’t yet exist,” the RCPCH said. “We have even less evidence on the long-term impacts of these products on young lungs, hearts and brains.

    “It took experts decades to fully understand the impact of traditional cigarettes; we cannot risk our children’s health in waiting this long again for longer-term studies.”

    Action on Smoking and Health data found that there has been a 50 percent increase in UK kids trying vaping over the last year and a rise in experimental vaping among 11-year-olds to 17-year-olds.

    “Without a doubt, disposable e-cigarettes should be banned,” said Mike McKean. “There is absolutely no reason that these cheap, readily available, brightly colored, recreational products should be single use.

    “Westminster’s approach to this problem is out of step with even our closest neighbors, with countries such as Scotland, France, Germany and Ireland all seriously considering a ban.”

    In response to the RCPCH’s call, the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) stated that while youth vaping needs to be addressed, banning disposables is not the answer.

    “There is no doubt that strong, targeted action directed at those illegally selling vape products to children is the way forward,” said John Dunne, director general of the UKVIA, in a statement. “Vitally, any youth prevention measures cannot be to the detriment of adult smokers looking to quit through vaping and vapers who want to avoid a return to smoking.”

  • Media Reports Claim Turkmenistan Banned Vaping

    Media Reports Claim Turkmenistan Banned Vaping

    Credit: Michalknitl

    Turkmenistan has banned the sale of electronic cigarettes and other vaping products, according to media reports.

    E-cigarette use has grown in the country where conventional tobacco products are almost completely banned.

    Buying disposable electronic cigarettes, reusable vape devices, spare parts for them, as well as filling liquids has recently become almost impossible, according to the reports.

    Officially, no regulations were issued, the goods simply disappeared from sale. Sellers tell buyers that they have been banned.

    Previously, electronic cigarettes were sold online and in some brick-and-mortar stores.

    “In particular, high-end night shops throughout Ashgabat have become a popular place[s] to sell this product,” media reports. These shops are owned by relatives of the president’s family.”

    Sources note that even now in some of these stores people can still buy disposable electronic cigarettes, as well as hookahs and tobacco for them, according to media reports.