E-cigarettes should have stiff regulatory curbs, WHO urges
Vaping industry called an evolving frontier filled with promise & threat for tobacco control
The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday called for regulation of electronic cigarettes as well as bans on indoor use, advertising and sales to minors.
In a long-awaited report that will be debated by member states at a meeting in October in Moscow, the United Nations health agency also voiced concern at the concentration of the $3 billion US market in the hands of transnational tobacco companies.
The WHO declared war on "Big Tobacco" a decade ago, clinching the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the world's first public health treaty that has been ratified by 179 states since entering into force in 2005.
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Prior to Tuesday's report it had indicated it would favour applying similar restrictions to all nicotine-containing products including smokeless ones.
The WHO urged a range of "regulatory options", including prohibiting e-cigarette makers from making health claims — such as that they help people quit smoking — until they provide "convincing supporting scientific evidence and obtain regulatory approval".
E-cigarettes should be regulated to minimize "content and emissions of toxicants", and those solutions with fruit, candy-like and alcohol-drinks flavours should be banned, it said. Vending machines should be removed in almost all locations.
Scientists are divided on the risks and potential benefits of e-cigarettes, which are widely considered to be a lot less harmful than conventional cigarettes.
One group of researchers warned the WHO in May not to classify them as tobacco products, arguing that doing so would jeopardize a major opportunity to slash disease and deaths caused by smoking.
But opposing experts argued a month later that the WHO should hold firm to its plan for strict regulations.
A total of 178 countries are parties to the FCTC and are obliged to implement its measures, with the United States the one notable non-signatory.
Major tobacco companies including Imperial Tobacco, Altria Group, Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco are increasingly launching their own e-cigarette brands as sales of conventional products stall in Western markets.
A Wells Fargo analyst report in July projected that U.S. sales of e-cigarettes would outpace conventional ones by 2020.
Uptake of electronic cigarettes, which use battery-powered cartridges to produce a nicotine-laced inhalable vapour, has rocketed in the last two years and analysts estimate the industry had worldwide sales of some $3 billion US in 2013.
But the devices are controversial. Because they are so new there is a lack of long-term scientific evidence to support their safety and some fear they could be "gateway" products to nicotine addiction and tobacco smoking.
A study by U.S. researchers published on Monday found they may be more tempting to non-smoking youths than conventional cigarettes.
Also on Monday, the American Heart Association's first policy statement on electronic cigarettes backed them as a last resort to help smokers quit.