Read articles from United Kingdom
February 13, 2024 by standard.co.uk
What is the drug ‘spice’? Five children seriously ill after smoking e-cigs laced with Spice
The public is urged to refrain from purchasing illegal drugs due to the unknown substances they may contain, according to a statement from officials. The Welsh Emerging Drugs and Identification of Novel Substances service (Wedinos) has warned that people buying e-cigarettes laced with Spice may have thought they contained cannabis oils or liquids.
February 13, 2024 by mirror.co.uk
EXCLUSIVE: Vaping vs smoking - from 'popcorn lung' to cancer and heart attacks, which is really better?
Smoking is the country's number one preventable killer, and millions have been ditching cigarettes for vapes. But more than 6.6million Brits continue to puff on the deadly sticks each day, in spite of a review by Public Health England that estimated e-cigarettes are 95 per cent less harmful than tobacco cigarettes. Nevertheless, the battery-powered cigs, also known as vapes, have been booming in popularity and many have managed to kick the pernicious habit because of them. The very same 2015 review found that almost all of the 2.6m adults using vapes in Great Britain were current or ex-smokers.
February 05, 2024 by dailymail.co.uk
Rishi Sunak's warned disposable ban could lead to 'turf wars' by doctors as Australia's anti-vaping laws leads to rise in smoking and gang violence
The Government's plan to ban disposable vapes has been branded 'a big mistake' by doctors who warn the move could drive up smoking rates and even lead to a rise in gang violence. But experts warn that users may end up smoking cigarettes instead – potentially reversing years of campaigning which have led to the UK's historically low smoking rate. Many point to Australia where, despite some of the strictest anti-vaping laws in the world, the number of teens both vaping and smoking has rocketed as a flourishing black market involving organised crime gangs has made the devices easier to buy.
February 02, 2024 by qz.com
The UK will ban disposable vapes and curb candy-flavored e-cigarettes that attract children under 18
Britain's government will ban the sale of disposable vapes and limit their cornucopia of flavors to prevent children from becoming addicted to nicotine, officials said Monday. It also plans to stick to a contentious proposal to ban today’s young people from ever buying cigarettes. “You talk to any parent or teacher, they’ll talk to you about the worrying rise in vaping among children," Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told reporters. “Children shouldn’t be vaping, we don’t want them to get addicted. We still don’t understand the full long-term health impacts of vaping. So it is right we take strong action to stamp this out.”
February 02, 2024 by euronews.com
UK announces single-use vape ban. Which other countries are cracking down on vaping?
The UK has announced a ban on disposable e-cigarettes, which have become popular among teens. Which other countries are cracking down? When e-cigarettes first came to the market, they were advertised as the lesser of two evils, helping people move away from traditional cigarettes and the health risks associated with smoking. But in more recent years, vapes have become something of a trend among young people. The single-use vape - also known as a “puff bar” - is practically an accessory item, and an increasing number of teenagers can be seen donning the flashy stick. Several countries around the globe are considering banning them to curb the phenomenon.
February 02, 2024 by time.com
Why the U.K. Is Banning Disposable Vapes
The U.K. government announced a plan on Monday to ban the sale of disposable vapes, in an attempt to curb the rise in vaping among children. The plan would also force companies to use plain packaging and place restrictions on flavors sold in an effort to make the products less appealing to children. It would also place restrictions on how vapes are advertised in shops. “The long-term impacts of vaping are unknown and the nicotine within them can be highly addictive, so while vaping can be a useful tool to help smokers quit, marketing vapes to children is not acceptable,” Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said in a statement. He stressed that adult smokers aiming to quit would still be able to access vape kits.
February 01, 2024 by spiked-online.com
I ban, therefore I am
Beware a politician in search of a legacy. Rishi Sunak, in a desperate attempt to find something, anything, to point to as an achievement, has taken to banning things that this teetotal, straight-edge prime minister has probably never tried and clearly doesn’t understand. At the Conservative Party conference last year, Sunak decided that making England ‘smoke-free’ would be his chapter in history. So he announced Britain’s biggest experiment in prohibition for generations: a phased-in ban on tobacco products that will mean today’s 15-year-olds will never legally be able to buy cigarettes.
February 01, 2024 by spiked-online.com
I ban, therefore I am
Beware a politician in search of a legacy. Rishi Sunak, in a desperate attempt to find something, anything, to point to as an achievement, has taken to banning things that this teetotal, straight-edge prime minister has probably never tried and clearly doesn’t understand. At the Conservative Party conference last year, Sunak decided that making England ‘smoke-free’ would be his chapter in history. So he announced Britain’s biggest experiment in prohibition for generations: a phased-in ban on tobacco products that will mean today’s 15-year-olds will never legally be able to buy cigarettes.
February 01, 2024 by youtube.com
Prof Nick Hopkinson discusses smoking and vaping on Times Radio
Professor Nick Hopkinson, chairman of Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) and Professor of Respiratory Medicine at Imperial College London is interviewed on Times Radio about the recent ban on disposable vapes and plans to create a smokefree generation. He appears alongside Christopher Snowden, head of lifestyle economics at the tobacco industry-funded Institute of Economic Affairs.
January 31, 2024 by ft.com
UK’s vape ban highlights benefit of big tobacco’s run-off strategy
Anyone who has ever attempted a self-help plan knows that transformations are hard. That holds true for tobacco companies, too. They would like to think that they can build a sustainable future selling vapes and snus (oral smokeless tobacco) from the embers of their traditional cigarette business. But — as the UK’s ban on disposable vapes suggests — the growth potential of alternative nicotine delivery products appears limited.