Vapouround magazine ISSUE 17 | Page 26

NEWS E-CIGARETTES A VITAL TOOL FOR EU SMOKING CESSATION VAPING COULD SOON USURP TRADITIONAL NICOTINE REPLACEMENT THERAPIES ACROSS EUROPE - BY GORDON STRIBLING - A study published in peer-reviewed journal Tobacco Control suggests that e-cigarettes could be on-course to replace nicotine replacement therapy and counselling as the quitting aid of choice throughout the European Union. Perhaps the most notable takeaway from the study was that while there has been a decrease in the use of smoking cessation services and pharmacotherapy (i.e. prescription treatments like Champix and Zyban), e-cigarette use has increased by six percent. Researchers drew upon data gleaned from the 2012 and 2017 waves of the Eurobarometer survey. The survey consisted of face- to-face interviews with around 1,000 residents of each country. The study conducted by the Public Health Policy Evaluation Unit at Imperial College considered variables within European nations, such as age and access to smoking-cessation services. According to the research, young people were more likely to have used e-cigarettes for smoking cessation but less likely to have accessed a smoking cessation service like the one provided by the NHS. THE PAPER CONCLUDED: “This highlights the need to evaluate [e-cigarettes] efficacy and impact on individual abstinence as well as their population-level implications and to explore whether they may be displacing standard cessation assistance.” The findings echo much of what we already know about the success of e-cigarettes in helping smokers to quit. A study published in the British Medical Journal in January found that 40 percent of people who attempted to quit smoking did so with e-cigarettes. And a study published in Addictive Behaviours found that daily e-cigarette users were three times more likely to quit than those who never used e-cigarettes. Little, if any of this, is news to the vaping community. But it does raise an interesting question: Should health practitioners in other 26 | VM17 European nations follow the UK’s lead in encouraging smokers to consider e-cigarettes alongside more traditional stop-smoking therapies? Research conducted by University College London [UCL] for Smoking in Britain found that success rates in quitting were higher in England in the first six months of 2017 than the average rate in the preceding decade. This improvement was seen exclusively among people with lower socio-economic status. This group has historically been the most resistant to stop-smoking campaigns and other tobacco control methods, both in the UK and Europe as a whole. While the government, academics and the NHS have been vocal in their support of e-cigarettes, it’s important to note that the devices themselves are only a part of a broader initiative. The highest success is seen where vapers access some form of support, as reiterated by the authors of the UCL study: “E-cigarettes are widely available and popular, together with a wide variety of medically licensed cessation aids, there is a behavioural support service free at the point of access available in most areas of the country, and tobacco control mass media campaigns are frequently run, including national quitting events, such as Stoptober.” Much of this behavioural support is provided by knowledgeable and passionate vape shop staff. A study conducted by the University of East Anglia and published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health highlighted the role vape shop staff play in helping smokers transition to vaping. Lead researcher, Dr Emma Ward, said: “We found that vape shops provided effective behavioural support to help quitters stay smoke free. Shop assistants were really keen to understand customers’ smoking preferences and give tailored advice about the most appropriate products. And they were an ongoing point of contact for practical help.” Supportive vape shop staff can be found all over Europe. We often talk about the vaping ‘community’ and that’s exactly what