Vapouround magazine Issue 02 | Page 22

NEWS Vapouround Magazine’s Reaction to Public Health England E-Cigarette Report It is brilliant news for the vaping community that public health officials have recognised that e-cigarettes can play a huge part in saving the lives of traditional smokers. Not only is this good news for the vaping community, but it has potentially massive implications for the country as a whole. We really hope it goes some way to starting a serious program of education about the whole issue of vaping and e-cigarettes. It is encouraging that many people already recognise that e-cigarettes are a safer means of ingesting nicotine than traditional smoking. Now with the news that a report from Public Health England, Kings College London and Queen Mary University of London, found that e-cigarettes carry just five per cent of the risk of tobacco this can only help to remove some of the myths about vaping. PHE chief executive Duncan Selbie wrote in the forward to the report: “Many people think the risks of e- cigarettes are the same as smoking tobacco and this report clarifies the truth of this. “In a nutshell, best estimates show e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful to your health than normal cigarettes, and when supported by a smoking cessation service, help most smokers to quit tobacco altogether. “We believe this review will prove a valuable resource, explaining the relative risks and benefits of e-cigarettes, in terms of harm reduction when compared with cigarettes and as an aid to quitting.” The fact that the same public health officials say that e-cigarettes should be 18 WINTER EDITION VAPOUROUND MAGAZINE available on the NHS as a means to help people quit smoking is something to be applauded. Ask any vaper and they will either tell you that vaping is the reason they quit smoking traditional cigarettes or they can point to a friend or family member who gave up because of e-cigarettes. Now that we appear to have official recognition of this can only be a good thing but the work of educating the public cannot stop here. This report should be seen as the beginning and more research into the health benefits of vaping as opposed to smoking should be carried out. The findings of this new report mean that if every one of Britain’s eight million smokers switched to e-cigarettes instead then around 75,000 lives could be saved each year. That is an astonishing statistic and this report may go some way to seeing e-cigarettes being taken more seriously as a safer alternative to smoking traditional cigarettes. In addition we also report in this issue details of a survey which has found that there is no evidence to suggest that electronic cigarettes act as a gateway to encouraging young people to smoke. This is also great news for the industry and these two reports should go a long way to dispelling some of the misinformation and general misunderstanding which exists about vaping and the effects of vaping. The more information that is out there and the more research that is done can only lead to a better understanding about the vaping industry and the vaping community as a whole. However when a body such as Public Health England shows the massive potential that vaping has to save so many lives then we all should sit up and take notice. It is not only deaths that we need to focus on here because even if smoking does not kill you it can cause many serious chronic illnesses which can seriously impact upon a smoker’s quality of life. We are not suggesting for a moment that vaping is the solution to the nation’s health problems but if it has the potential to save 75,000 lives each year then surely the NHS must look to e-cigarettes as a potential treatment for smoking. The fact is that more and more people are reporting that vaping has been the only thing that has made them stop smoking. This includes many life-long smokers and people who had otherwise been smoking despite the damage it was causing to their health. Finally it is always good to be able to use facts and figures to back up any arguments or statements on using e-cigarettes so here are seven key messages from the Public Health England 111-page report.