Dr Caroline Johnson (Sleaford and North Hykeham) (Con) I beg to
move, That this House has considered electronic cigarette use.
E-cigarettes were introduced as a stop-smoking device, but in my
opinion they have moved from being a stop- smoking device to an
alternative addiction. Indeed, they are attracting many
non-smokers. In 2007, there were around 10.6 million smokers,
according to official figures. The number fell to 6.6 million in
2022, so 4 million smokers had...Request free trial
(Sleaford and North
Hykeham) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered electronic cigarette use.
E-cigarettes were introduced as a stop-smoking device, but in my
opinion they have moved from being a stop- smoking device to an
alternative addiction. Indeed, they are attracting many
non-smokers. In 2007, there were around 10.6 million smokers,
according to official figures. The number fell to 6.6 million in
2022, so 4 million smokers had stopped. Sadly, it is estimated
that around 1 million of those people died, which means that
around 3 million quit smoking. That is undoubtedly a huge
success, although it cannot be attributed entirely to vapes.
In the Health and Social Care Committee yesterday, we heard from
the industry that it estimates that around 5 million people
currently vape in the UK, which means that, even by the most
generous estimates, 2 million of them were not smokers
beforehand—a significant proportion of the vaping market. With
the market estimated to be worth £4 billion a year, these
products clearly have huge profit margins. Vapes have been
available for a long time, but if they are genuinely safe,
healthy devices that save lives by stopping people smoking, why
does the NHS not provide any on prescription? I wonder whether it
is because they are not safe and the NHS has been unable to
develop the safety profile as well as it might wish.
The idea that e-cigarettes are 95% safer than smoking was
quantified by Public Health England. Members will no doubt have
heard the figure before, because the vaping lobby never tires of
repeating it, but if we look into its origins, its veracity seems
to suddenly disappear. The figure originated in a 2014 paper in a
journal called European Addiction Research, but it comes with
some important caveats. The study was partly funded by the
Italian Anti-Smoking League, and one of its authors was a member
of that organisation and served as a consultant to an e-cigarette
distributor at the time. That blatant potential conflict of
interest did not escape the journal’s editors, who added a
warning note at the end of the paper, but it certainly escaped
subsequent reporting of the figure.
The scientific journal The Lancet was even more excoriating of
the original article, accusing it of having
“an almost total absence of evidence”
and of being based on
“the opinions of a small groups of individuals with no
prespecified expertise in tobacco control”.
Furthermore, it is worth noting that the paper is seriously
outdated. Since 2014, a plethora of evidence has emerged about
the negative effects of these novel and fast-evolving devices, in
studies that were never considered when the figure of 95% was
reached. I am concerned that the statistic will age about as well
as the claims made to past generations about the health benefits
of smoking.
As we delve deeper into the topic, it becomes evident that a
growing body of evidence links vaping to severe complications.
Chronic bronchitis, emphysema, increased blood pressure and
significantly worse physical performance are just some of the
adverse effects associated with vaping that scientists have
found. Furthermore, the high nicotine content, which some say is
roughly equivalent to between 40 and 50 cigarettes in a
disposable vape, poses a grave risk to the health and wellbeing
of young people. We heard yesterday in the Health and Social Care
Committee from Dr Helen Stewart of the Royal College of
Paediatrics and Child Health—I should declare my interest as a
member of that college and a consultant paediatrician—who told us
about the difficulties that children are facing. Some of them are
not going to the toilet during school time because the clouds of
vapour they experience there trigger their asthma and make them
unwell. We heard about children collapsing, too.
The number of children vaping is increasing. The evidence
submitted to the Health and Social Care Committee by the vaping
industry suggests that over 83% of children have never vaped or
are unaware of vaping, but that flies in the face of the
experience of most of the children, teachers and doctors I have
spoken to. Indeed, a report on Blackpool published by Healthwatch
in May found that a staggering 31% of children and young people
claim to vape or sometimes vape. More disturbingly still, when I
asked Healthwatch if it could break down its figures by age, it
said that one in ten 10 and 11-year-olds vapes. These are
children in year 6. That rises to nearly one in five 12 to
13-year-olds, while for 16 to 17-year-olds the figure was almost
one in two. We have also noticed that the number of children
vaping is rising extremely quickly.
I would like share a distressing incident from my constituency.
In just one school, St George’s Academy in Sleaford, there have
been eight reported cases of children collapsing after vaping.
Those incidents occurred at different times with different
children. I was deeply troubled to hear about this, so I went to
visit them and met with one of the intelligence officers from
Lincolnshire police, who had collected five vapes from another
school.
In just those five vapes they found Velvana Fridex Eko, a modern
non-toxic coolant intended for cooling cast iron and aluminium
engines, as well as Avanti coolant antifreeze, Steol-M, which is
designed for filling hydraulic devices, and Rauvolfia serpentina,
or Indian snakeroot. Also found was Agip antifreeze, trichloro-
ethylene, and poster and watercolour
varnish—1-methoxy-2-propanol—along with diethylene glycol
diacetate and 2-methoxyethyl acetate, a substance that may damage
fertility and unborn children and is harmful to the skin if
inhaled or swallowed. They also found aviptadil, a synthetic
vasoactive intestinal peptide that is used to treat certain
medical conditions.
These vapes do not contain what the children think they do, and
they can be very dangerous. The police found that some children
had significant health issues. The eight children who collapsed
in Sleaford were taken to hospital. Thankfully, they have all
recovered, but in one description given to me, a child taken to
hospital in the back of a car had one side of his face drooped
down as if he had had a stroke. His mother was clearly terrified
by this. Another young boy said that he thought he was walking
along through the marketplace in Sleaford when he realised that
people were gathered around someone who had collapsed. Then he
realised, as if looking from above, that that person was him. We
have heard some really scary stories about what has been going
on.
We hear that vaping is a good route to quitting, but we should
balance the fact that it may help adults to quit with the need to
keep these devices away from children. One of the things that
makes vapes attractive to children is how inexpensive they are.
We have seen them at £4 each, three for a tenner and those sorts
of prices, which is clearly within pocket money range. When
children can get disposables so cheaply, they are easy to
discard. If a child finds that mum or dad is coming down the
corridor or up to the bedroom, they can dispose of them quite
quickly. When teachers come into the toilet, they can be disposed
of, including in sanitary waste bins, which poses other hazards,
too.
How much nicotine is in vapes? The average disposable contains 2
ml of e-liquid at 20 mg/ml nicotine strength, which I am told is
the equivalent of 40 to 50 cigarettes. The reason for that is
that people only take about 10% of the nicotine from cigarettes
into their lungs—the rest of the time it just goes into the
air—so vapes are stronger in many cases than cigarettes.
The other issue I want to raise with the Minister today is
marketing tactics. We heard yesterday from the chief executive of
Totally Wicked, who I challenged on his marketing techniques.
Totally Wicked sponsors Blackburn Rovers and a rugby team as
well, so the stadium is called Totally Wicked. The young men on
the pitch—the heroes, as he called them, who those young men and
women admire so much—are running around with T-shirts emblazoned
with “Totally Wicked”. He said that the young people’s ones do
not have that logo on. I checked this morning and found no
evidence of them selling any junior shirts, which begs the
question of what happened to them all. The suspicion might be
that they have disappeared off sale—we do not know.
The Online Safety Bill offers an opportunity to ensure that vapes
are not advertised on platforms such as TikTok. Vapes have
bright, attractive packaging, with colours and flavours such as
bubble gum. Why does an adult smoker need a unicorn
milkshake-flavoured vape to quit? My 12-year-old daughter is too
old for unicorns, she would tell me now, so why an adult would
need a unicorn, I do not know. These vapes have become fashion
accessories, and are being matched to outfits. Walk into any
corner shop and we can see a whole rainbow from which to choose.
There are understandable concerns that some manufacturers are
deliberately doing that. They would all deny it, of course, and I
hope that it is not the case, but with flavours such as unicorn
milkshake, bubble gum, candy floss and green Gummy Bear, it is
clear that these things are far too attractive to children. I ask
the Minister to consider whether, if these are truly stop-smoking
devices and not lifestyle products that are attractive to
children, they really need to be coloured and flavoured. I do not
think they do.
The environmental impact of disposable vapes has been highlighted
by a number of my colleagues in the House on a number of
occasions. Some 1.3 million disposable vapes are discarded in the
UK every week. The vast majority are not recycled. Their complex
construction and high nicotine concentration make proper disposal
challenging. They also contain lithium batteries, a precious and
vital resource in our transition away from fossil fuels that is
being discarded willy-nilly, sometimes into rivers and water
courses. That further exacerbates the environmental
consequences.
Vapes have also been known to cause fires in bins, bin lorries
and recycling centres. They pose a danger. I am also advised that
the plastic, because the nicotine salts leak into it, becomes
hazardous waste and is non-recyclable in any case. I urge the
Government to back my ten-minute rule Bill and to ban these
devices. A ban has been backed by the Royal College of
Paediatrics and Child Health, and by the Royal Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It is a widely supported
measure.
As well as the issue with colours and flavours, we need tougher
regulations on the advertising and marketing of vaping products.
Health warnings should cover 65% of the front and back of the
pack, in the same way as for tobacco. Sports club sponsorships
should be banned. I cannot see why these products need to be
advertised on sporting shirts; there is also the worry that that
will make them more attractive to children.
When the former Government brought in bans on where people could
smoke and where cigarettes could be displayed, the number of
smokers dropped dramatically. I appreciate that that is a nanny
state measure and, as Conservatives, we are reluctant to bring in
nanny state measures. Nevertheless, it did work. If we were to
ask people now whether we should reverse that measure, I do not
think that many, if any, would agree. I suggest that as a
sensible step forward.
At the moment, we are banning sweeties at the till because we
think that will help to stop people becoming obese, but I have
been into shops where those sweeties have been replaced with
vapes. I am sure most people would much prefer that their child
had a packet of Rolos than a vape.
My third point is about regulation. The industry is actually
quite positive on this issue, and is keen for regulation—at
least, that is what they say. At the moment, anyone can sell a
vape. When I take my son for a haircut, we could get three
lemon-flavoured vapes for £1 while we are there. He is only
eight, so he will not be getting any, but we could. If we go to
the sweetie shops on Oxford Street, we can buy them along with
the candy.
Having the same sort of regulations as for tobacco or alcohol
would mean that people would have to be licensed and would be
challenged to make sure that vapes did not get into the hands of
children, and there would be bigger fines. I saw an example of
someone being fined £200 for selling these things to children.
That is clearly no disincentive. A proper regulatory framework,
where people lose their ability to sell these fairly lucrative
products in the event that they break the regulations, will
reduce the supply to children.
I also wanted to raise taxation. I appreciate that it is not the
Minister’s responsibility, but he can raise it with the
Chancellor and other colleagues. This measure was supported by
Action on Smoking and Health in the Health Committee yesterday.
If vapes are around £4 and a packet of cigarettes is £12, we
could add considerable amounts—ASH is asking for a £5 tax on
every disposable vape—as a way of taking them out of the range of
children’s pocket money, while making sure that they are still
cheaper than a packet of cigarettes for those adults who
genuinely are smokers who wish to quit. Children are very
price-sensitive and we need to deter them from this harmful
habit.
My final point is about education. We heard from the headteacher
of St George’s Academy yesterday in the Health Committee.
Children need to know about vapes, and understand that they are
not lifestyle products for them to use but aids for adults to
stop smoking. The relationships, sex and health education
curriculum review that is being done at the moment offers
Ministers an opportunity to ensure that that happens. I am
interested to hear what the Minister has to say.
1.45pm
(Calder Valley) (Con)
It is always a pleasure to speak in a debate that you chair, Mrs
Latham, and today is no exception. While I do not disagree with
the speech of my hon. Friend the Member for Sleaford and North
Hykeham (Dr Johnson), I do come at the issue from a very
different angle.
Every smoker is different. The reason they smoke and the reason
they struggle to quit is different, and their ultimate method of
quitting is different too. In my case, after smoking for the vast
majority of the last 40 years, I can honestly say that I totally
enjoyed virtually every cigarette I had over those decades.
Quitting was never on my agenda, despite persistent nudging from
friends and family members. Imagine my horror, then, when I was
presented with a device called an IQOS, just to try out. It was
even presented as a bet that I would find the experience similar
to smoking a cigarette, but it would be about 90% less harmful
for me. Just for the record, I do not have any shares in the
company, nor do I stand to make any financial gain from the
device.
The IQOS uses heated tobacco. On 12 March, I smoked my last
traditional cigarette, and now, after losing the bet, use heated
tobacco on a daily basis. My long-standing smoker’s cough has
completely disappeared, and my breathing is now far stronger—I am
sure that with the loss of a few more pounds it will become even
stronger still.
I support the Government in their embrace of tobacco harm
reduction strategies. I urge the Minister to continue to ensure
access to a full range of less harmful alternatives to smoking.
As we have seen, people who want to stop smoking use a variety of
methods and aids to do so, whether that is patches, pouches,
hypnosis, tablets or even going cold turkey. While for me the
IQOS and the heated tobacco system is perfect, many people also
use vapes.
While anything is better than smoking for one’s health, there are
approximately 3.3 million vapers—although I think my hon. Friend
the Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham said the figure was
about 5 million in the UK. The only problem with vaping—apart
from all the things she brought up—is that, according to Action
on Smoking and Health, 35% of vapers also smoke cigarettes. The
vape is dual use: people use it in places where they cannot
smoke, and they smoke in places where they can. I strongly
believe from my own experience that this is because vapes do not
mimic the feeling of a cigarette as heated tobacco does.
On electronic cigarettes especially, I share my hon. Friend’s
concerns about youth accessing vaping products. I am pleased that
there are studies that have shown that heated tobacco products
are less attractive than vapes to younger people who have never
smoked. Additionally, the same research into heated tobacco
products shows that they pose significantly less risk to users
than traditional cigarettes. By heating tobacco rather than
burning it, those products produce substantially less harmful and
potentially harmful chemicals than cigarettes. That makes them
less harmful for users—and, of course, they have stopped my
long-standing cough.
We see the impact of reduced-risk tobacco products evidenced in
some of the most progressive countries in the world. For example,
in Japan, the first country to launch heated tobacco products,
the sale of cigarettes has fallen by an average of 9.5% annually,
compared with 1.8% before the introduction of heated tobacco. As
a result, the burden on its healthcare system has also eased
considerably, with a statistically significant reduction in rates
of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and ischemic heart
disease.
Another reduced-risk tobacco product is Snus, which is not
available in the UK, but is largely responsible for Sweden’s
national smoking rate of 6%. That figure puts Sweden in place to
be the first country in the world to reach smoke-free status.
That is a target that the UK is due to miss by 2030—although I
hope the Minster will tell me different. As we work to reduce the
NHS backlog, it is essential that we take a pragmatic and
evidence-led approach, and note research in countries such as
Japan and Sweden where harm reduction policies are having a
significant impact on reducing smoking rates and, as such, there
is reduced demand on their health services.
While there are further lessons we can learn from other nations,
we in the UK should be proud of our role as a world leader in
harm reduction. For example, the Government’s “swap to stop”
scheme is the first of its kind in the world. It is essential
that the UK stands up for its positive harm reduction polices at
international forums, such as at the upcoming COP10 to the World
Health Organisation framework convention on tobacco control in
Panama in November. Now the UK has left the EU, we have the
freedom to speak up and ensure that our sovereignty and our
health and taxation policy formation are protected. If we do not
use that opportunity in November, the WHO may seek to impede our
taxation sovereignty in this area. Indeed, more widely, it
threatens to stop access to heated tobacco products—that is where
the self-interest comes in, of course—as it looks to get
signatories to apply the same rules to heated tobacco products
and other nicotine products, such as vapes, as we currently do to
cigarettes, despite their less harmful nature. As such, I would
be grateful if the Minister outlined what plans he has to stand
up for vaping and heated tobacco at COP10 in November, and
committed to opposing any recommendations that are counter to our
own sovereign-established position here in the UK.
As I have said, I am grateful for the opportunity to raise my
personal experience of quitting smoking through the use of
reduced-risk products, and we have a positive story to tell here
in the UK about our approach to harm reduction. I look forward to
hearing from the Minister about his plans to protect health in
the UK. It has made a huge impact on my life, even after just
four short months.
1.52pm
(Paisley and Renfrewshire
North) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to see the MP for the second-best Rolls-Royce
site in the UK in the Chair, Mrs Latham. I congratulate the hon.
Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham (Dr Johnson)—if I can read
my own writing, which is a first—on securing the debate. She set
out the issues rather well and debunked many of the various
questions—sorry, various assertions; I said I could not read my
own writing—that the vaping industry likes to promulgate in the
media.
The hon. Member spoke about the incidents at St George’s Academy,
with eight reported cases of children collapsing after vaping. I
will not try to repeat the rather horrific menu of ingredients
that our children are being exposed to, but that was clearly
deeply concerning. The hon. Member cited, among other things,
marketing techniques. I could not agree with her more, and I will
elaborate on that later. She said her 12-year-old would probably
say she is too old for unicorns, but I would say you are never
too old for Scotland’s national animal.
The right hon. Member for Calder Valley () took a different tack, and
I am genuinely pleased for him about his tobacco harm reduction
journey. As somebody who grew up with a parent who smoked—I will
not say, “in a smoke-filled house”; that would be doing my mother
a disservice—I have always hated tobacco, to be perfectly honest,
and the thought of heated tobacco is not something that sounds
particularly nice. While largely based on the right hon. Member’s
experience, his speech was a bit of an advert for heated tobacco.
It may well have a place in reducing tobacco harm, but I am not
sure whether it reduces the harm enough. I also disagree with his
final point about the World Health Organisation recommendations
to make vapes and other tobacco products as difficult to acquire
as cigarettes, but I am more than happy to learn more about
that.
As the hon. Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham said, the
number of people using e-cigarettes in the UK has risen
astronomically. It has now reached around 5 million people, which
is over 8% of the population. That unprecedented increase in such
a short time raises serious questions about the safety of
e-cigarettes from both a public health and environmental point of
view. Current evidence shows that the use of e-cigarettes is less
harmful and risky than smoking tobacco, but that does not mean
that e-cigarettes are not harmful; they are only the lesser of
two evils.
According to a 2022 YouGov survey, the occasional and regular use
of e-cigarettes among 11 to 17-year-olds has doubled since the
previous year. As a father of a 13-year-old and a 16-year-old, I
find that deeply concerning. The adolescent brain is particularly
vulnerable to the effects of nicotine. Vaping can impact young
people’s brain development, impacting their cognitive functions
such as attention, memory and learning.
The same study found that 40% of those using e-cigarettes have
never smoked tobacco. The WHO has also stated there is evidence
to suggest that “never-smoker”—a new phrase to me—minors who use
e-cigarettes are twice as likely to take up smoking later in
life. That raises serious concerns, as the consumption of
nicotine in children and adolescents can lead to long-term
developmental consequences and potential learning and anxiety
disorders.
We have said many times in this place that the scale of mental
health problems, particularly among young people, was increasing
significantly before the pandemic, but that increase became
exponential during it. Frontline staff working with children and
young people at Catch22 are concerned that vaping is a habit used
to cope with those negative feelings. Running away from negative
feelings and problems by using substances is a dangerous path
which has led many adults to addiction and mental issues later in
life. In short, vaping is a gateway to risker behaviour,
problematic or dependent substance use, and mental health
issues.
As we have touched on already, serious concerns have rightly been
raised about the marketing of e-cigarettes. Specifically, the
colourful branding and variety of flavours has been likened to
that of sweets and other confectionary. Combined with content
that glamorises e-cigarettes on popular social media platforms
such as TikTok, those tactics can lead to misinformation about
the dangers of vaping among the younger generations.
In July, an investigation by The Observer found that ElfBar, a
company with no moral or social compass, was flouting rules to
promote its products to young people in Britain. Items were
advertised in TikTok videos by influencers, who in some cases
claimed to be paid for the promotions and to benefit from free
products. The videos, many of which showed influencers vaping on
camera, were not age-restricted and were not always clearly
marked as ads. Some attracted hundreds of thousands of views on
TikTok, which is used by half of eight to 11-year-olds and three
quarters of 16 to 17-year-olds. ElfBar is no longer able to sell
its products domestically, with China having banned them, but it
is free to export them to our young people.
E-cigarette emissions contain nicotine and other toxic substances
that are harmful to users and to non-users, who are exposed to
aerosols at second hand. Some products claiming to be
nicotine-free have been found to contain nicotine. In addition,
while cigarette smokers tend to be more discreet about blowing
their smoke away from other people, in my experience many vapers
have no qualms about blowing large plumes of emissions, which at
times resemble small clouds, anywhere and everywhere. The result
is that many of us cannot avoid walking through or breathing in
their vapours.
Cheap and easy-to-use disposable vapes are booming in popularity,
creating a mass waste issue. Shockingly, an estimated 13.5
million disposable vapes are bought in Scotland annually—two and
a half disposable vapes per man, woman and child. Discarded vapes
result in 10 tonnes of lithium being sent to landfill each year,
which is equivalent to the lithium content of 1,200 electric
vehicle batteries. The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has
stated that when single-use batteries are disposed of
incorrectly, which in most cases they are, heavy metals may leak
into the ground when the battery casing corrodes. That can cause
soil and water pollution, and endanger wildlife and human health.
Scotland is trying to move towards a circular economy and a
waste-free society, and working to support the recycling of
electronic cigarettes, but any regulation to ban them must come
from Westminster.
Of course the waste is a huge factor, but it pales into
insignificance compared with the risk to our children and young
adults that vaping poses. Despite what anyone from the industry
says, the flavours, styling and advertising are quite clearly
aimed at the young. My view is not only that advertising should
be banned, but that disposable vapes should be banned as soon as
possible. What are the Government doing to address the wide
availability of disposable vapes to young people—vapes that, as
we have heard, are often illegal and substantially more
dangerous? More widely, what are the Government doing to tackle
vaping among young people and children?
Although e-cigarettes are intended to be a healthier alternative
to tobacco, recent research shows a completely different and, to
be frank, fairly frightening picture. Too little is known about
the long-term impact of e-cigs, and the demographic using vapes
is far from what I am sure many envisaged. With statistics
showing the escalation in younger generations using e-cigarettes,
it is crystal clear that, beyond the point I just made about
banning disposables, stricter regulations on marketing and sales
are essential if we are to protect future generations. A study by
Action on Smoking and Health found that corner shops were the
“main source of purchase” for children and young people, so we
must do more to crack down on shopkeepers who sell disposable
vapes to those who are under-age.
Finally, it is critical that more research is carried out to
ensure that we understand the long-term impact that vaping and
exposure to high levels of nicotine has on health. We must never
forget that nicotine is a highly addictive drug and can have a
catastrophic impact on people’s health.
2.02pm
(Ilford North) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Latham,
and to respond to the points made in the course of this
afternoon’s debate on behalf of the official Opposition. I thank
the hon. Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham (Dr Johnson) not
just for securing the debate, but for the enormous amount of
campaigning work that she is doing on this issue and for the
wide-ranging and detailed scene-setting speech she gave at the
beginning, which highlighted the extent of the challenge and the
severity of the risk to children’s health.
Sadly, I think the hon. Lady has more work to do on her
colleagues in the Government when it comes to her proposal to ban
disposable vapes. The Secretary of State for Health and Social
Care gave a speech this week on
“recasting prevention from a Conservative perspective”—
whatever that means—in which he argued that bans are left wing
and an affront to personal freedom. I look forward to finding out
what that means for the Government’s drugs policy, but let me be
the first to welcome the hon. Lady—our new comrade—to the left.
The lyrics to “The Red Flag” are in the post.
I will address the point raised by the right hon. Member for
Calder Valley (). The central argument put
forward by the vaping industry is that, at their most effective,
e-cigarettes are a useful tool for driving down smoking rates. As
Dr Javed Khan highlighted in his 2030 smokefree review, if we
want to create a smokefree Britain, using vapes and other smoking
cessation aids will be essential in reaching that ambition, but
we should be under no illusion: although vapes are unquestionably
less harmful than cigarettes, they are none the less harmful
products.
I share the deep concerns that Members have expressed about the
impact that the vaping industry is having on children, because it
is not targeting children to get them off cigarettes, but to get
them on nicotine. I do not care what the industry leaders told
the Health and Social Care Committee yesterday; frankly, they are
insulting the public’s intelligence. If someone walks down pretty
much any high street in our country today, they will be able to
buy brightly coloured vapes and e-liquids with names such as
Vimto Breeze, Mango Ice, or indeed Unicorns. There is no doubt
that these products are being designed, packaged, marketed and
sold deliberately to children.
It is no wonder that there has been an explosion of under-age
vaping in recent years. Action on Smoking and Health estimates
that in just the last three years, under-age vaping has increased
by 50%, which shows that the vast majority of kids are being
exposed to e-cigarette promotions. In this debate today, we have
heard about the impact of illicit goods and the harmful
substances that many of these products, which are often sold to
children, contain. I personally have heard horrifying stories
about the extent of their promotion on popular social media
platforms, where children are able to buy them with ease,
although, frankly, they can also chance their arm quite
successfully on our high streets.
The effects of these products should seriously trouble us all.
Teachers have to monitor toilets in schools where children
congregate to vape; children make up excuses to leave their
classroom in order to satisfy their nicotine cravings; and
children in primary school, aged nine or younger, end up in
hospital because of the impact of vaping. Paediatric chest
physicians report that children are being put in intensive care
units for conditions such as lung bleeding, lung collapse and
lungs filling up with fat. One girl who started vaping while she
was at school told the BBC last week that she has:
“no control over it. I start to get shaky and it’s almost all I
can think of.”
I have seen some people warning of a “moral panic” about
under-age vaping, but children who are addicted to a drug are
unable to focus in the classroom, and it affects their behaviour
in other ways, too. We cannot sit back and allow a new generation
of kids to get hooked on nicotine.
I recognise that this concern is shared by Members across the
House, but I have to say that it is hard to swallow the comments
of Ministers, including the Prime Minister, who try to grab
headlines today by promising a crackdown on under-age vaping at
some time in the future, because they had a chance to vote for
such a crackdown two years ago. Labour tabled an amendment to the
Health and Care Act 2022 to ban the marketing of vapes to
under-18s, and it was Conservative Members who voted it down. I
hope that Ministers have had a genuine change of heart, but
either way there will be action on this issue after the general
election. The next Labour Government will come down like a ton of
bricks on companies pushing nicotine to children and we will ban
the branding and advertising of vapes to children.
I want to press the Minister on the Government’s progress towards
their Smokefree 2030 target, which Cancer Research UK estimates
they are set to miss by nine years. That will result in thousands
of additional deaths due to the health impacts of tobacco and
pile more and more pressure on an already overburdened national
health service. Cancer Research UK also estimates that, on
current trends, smoking will cause one million cancer cases by
2040. What are the Government planning to do to get us back on
track?
What has happened to the Government’s tobacco control plan, which
was promised in December 2021? Prevention is better than cure, so
the next Labour Government will shift the NHS from being a
service focused only on treating sickness to one that prevents
ill health in the first place, because that approach is better
for patients and less expensive for the taxpayer. We would make
all hospital trusts integrate smoking cessation interventions
into routine care and we would expect every trust to have a named
lead on smoking cessation. This would come alongside work with
councils to improve access to e-cigarettes as a stop-smoking aid,
and a clamp- down on the pervasive myths peddled by the tobacco
industry that smoking reduces stress and anxiety.
That is Labour’s plan to build a healthier society; that is
Labour putting the vaping industry on notice that we will not sit
idly by and allow a generation of young people to become addicted
to nicotine. Where is the Government’s plan?
2.09pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social
Care (Neil O’Brien)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs
Latham.
I start by thanking my hon. Friend the Member for Sleaford and
North Hykeham (Dr Johnson), who is a former colleague in the
Department for Health and Social Care. I thank her not only for
this debate and her brilliant speech, which was full of
interesting observations and ideas, striking and concerning
anecdotes, and great wit, but for her work in really driving the
debate on vaping in recent months and years. She has been a
leading voice in this area. Likewise, I thank my right hon.
Friend the Member for Calder Valley () for his interesting
insights.
Before I get into the main body of my speech, I will address some
of the specific issues raised. My hon. Friend the Member for
Sleaford and North Hykeham asked about the availability of
prescription products. The reason they are not available is that
the producers have not come forward with them at this stage. We
remain hopeful that that will happen, but we are reliant on
commercial companies wanting to do it. That is not about concerns
that it is less safe than smoking; it is just about commercial
partners bringing that forward for approval.
The SNP spokesperson, the hon. Member for Paisley and
Renfrewshire North (), pointed out that,
interestingly, vaping products are not available in China, even
though it exports them to the rest of the world. I do not think
that that has as much to do with the Chinese Communist party’s
position on public health as it does with the fact that it gets
huge revenues from its ownership of the tobacco industry, which
is still extremely big in China. I think it has more to do with
that than with an enlightened view on the relative safety of
vaping and smoking.
The Opposition spokesman, the hon. Member for Ilford North
(), asked specifically what we are doing on smoking.
Smoking rates came down from some 40% in the 1970s to 21% in
2010, and they are now at a record low of 13%. That is partly
because we have doubled excise duties and brought in a minimum
excise tax on the cheapest cigarettes, but it is also because we
continue to take further measures, including the measures I
announced recently, such as the help for a million smokers to
“swap to stop”, which is an innovative, world-first policy, and
our provision of health incentives to help those smoking during
pregnancy to stop. We know from partners in local areas that
evidence-based policy works. Much has been done and there is yet
more to do in the future.
I absolutely understand the concerns, and I am just as motivated
as my hon. Friend the Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham by
the challenge of youth vaping. Until recently, our regulations,
such as the minimum age of sale, advertising restrictions and the
cap on nicotine levels, had been holding down vaping rates.
However, over the last two years we have started to see a surge
in the use and promotion of cheap, colourful products that do not
always comply with our regulations. As hon. Members have
mentioned, there has been a sharp increase in children vaping and
the awareness of vaping. That is of great concern to me, for
exactly the same reason that it concerns my hon. Friend.
Despite its high effectiveness as a tool to help adults quit
smoking, we are absolutely aware of the risks that vapes pose to
children. Vapes are not risk-free. Nicotine is highly addictive,
it can be harmful and there are unanswered questions on long-term
use, as raised by my hon. Friend. As , the chief medical officer,
said:
“If you smoke, vaping is much safer; if you don’t smoke, don’t
vape”.
Last month, the Prime Minister announced several new measures to
tackle youth vaping, including taking steps to close the loophole
in our laws that allows the vaping industry to give out free
samples of vapes to under-18s. Recent data suggests that 2% of 11
to 15-year-old ever vapers—approximately 20,000 of them—said that
they were given it by a vape company, so we will stop that.
Secondly, the Prime Minister announced that we will update the
health education curriculum to teach kids about the risks of
vaping, as called for by my hon. Friend, just as schools do for
the risks of smoking and excessive drinking. To support that, the
Office for Health Improvement and Disparities is producing a new
resource pack for schools on vaping for the start of the new
academic year. The resources have been informed by research with
teachers and young people. The activities will feature films made
with young people in which they will talk in their own words
about the issues around vaping, as well as a clear presentation
of the latest evidence. Those resources build on other content we
have already produced for young people, including on the Frank
and Better Health websites, and input into educational resources
produced by partners including the Personal, Social, Health and
Economic Education Association.
The Prime Minister also announced that we will review the rules
on selling nicotine-free vapes to under-18s, to ensure that our
rules keep pace with what is happening in the industry, and
review the rules on issuing fines to shops selling vapes to
under-18s, to allow local trading standards to issue on-the-spot
fines and fixed penalty notices more easily. That will complement
existing fine and penalty procedures and cover both illegal and
underage sales for vapes and tobacco. Those steps build on
measures we are already undertaking.
Earlier this year, in April, I announced new measures to step up
our efforts to stop kids getting hooked on vaping. First, we
launched a call for evidence on youth vaping to identify
opportunities to reduce the number of children accessing and
using vape products, and to explore where Government can go
further. That explored a range of issues, several of which were
touched on by my hon. Friend, including the appearance and
characteristics of vapes, the marketing and promotion of vapes,
and the role of social media, as touched on by the hon. Member
for Paisley and Renfrewshire North. It sought to better
understand the vape market, looking at issues such as the price
of low-cost products, mentioned by my hon. Friend, and the
environmental impact of vapes. The call for evidence closed on 6
June, and Department of Health and Social Care officials have
begun to carefully examine the responses. We will be publishing
our response in early autumn, identifying and outlining areas
where we can go further.
I also announced in April that we are going further to enforce
the existing rules on vaping. I announced a specialised illicit
vaping enforcement squad, which is a dedicated team to tackle
underage vape sales and the illicit products that young people
have access to. That will hold companies to account and enforce
our current rules. We are providing an extra £3 million to
trading standards, which will help share knowledge and
intelligence across the country. It will undertake test
purchasing, disrupt illicit supply, including from organised
crime gangs, and remove illegal products from shelves at our
borders, which will tackle the horrifying issue raised by my hon.
Friend about the content of some illicit vapes. There will be
more testing to ensure compliance with our rules, and we will be
bolstering the training capacity of trading standards too.
Companies failing to comply with the law will absolutely be held
to account. In some cases, we have already got companies to
withdraw products from their shelves if they have not met our
rules. I am pleased to announce that National Trading Standards
has begun setting up the operation, gathering intelligence,
training staff and bolstering capacity to begin field work later
this summer.
I absolutely appreciate the calls for single-use vapes to be
banned due to their environmental impact, and also because of
their appeal to young people. In 2022, about 52% of young people
who vaped used disposable products, compared with just 8% in
2021. We are concerned by the increasing use of these products
and their improper disposal, for the reasons my hon. Friend
mentioned. We are exploring a whole range of options to address
this through the youth vaping call for evidence.
This is absolutely not a reason for not doing anything, but one
of the issues we will have to deal with is the nature of the
industry, which is based in Shenzhen, is highly nimble and
manufactures lots of different things. It will be a challenge to
address issues specific to disposable vapes, because the industry
will try to get around them by saying, “This is potentially
refillable.” In theory, my biro is refillable, but in practice,
and if it was cheap, it can simply be thrown away. Careful
consideration needs to be given to the question of what is and is
not disposable, if we are going to put some weight on it. I am
not in any way arguing that nothing can be done, but extremely
careful thought is required to ensure that the actions we take
are highly effective.
All vapes, including single-use vapes, fall within the scope of
the UK’s Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulations
2013, which require importers and manufacturers of vapes to
finance the cost of collection and proper treatment of all
equipment that is disposed of via local authority household waste
sites and returned to retailers and internet sellers. From an
environmental perspective, the starting point must be to assist
businesses to understand their obligations and bring them into
compliance. If we can achieve that, the environmental impacts can
be reduced. The Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs will shortly be consulting on reforming the WEEE
Regulations to ensure that more of this material is properly
recycled.
We are committed to doing all we can to prevent children from
starting vaping, and we are already taking robust action in a
range of areas. We are also looking closely at how we can go
further. As I mentioned, early this autumn we will publish the
response to the youth vaping call for evidence and outline our
next steps, and we want to move fast.
Before the Minister concludes, does he have any thoughts on the
World Health Organisation forum in Panama this November and
whether the UK will be subscribing to the WHO requests or
pursuing our own policies as a sovereign nation?
Neil O’Brien
My right hon. Friend asks an important question. We will set out
our position for that conference of the parties in due course. On
the question of heat-not-vape products, they are, as far as one
can see from the evidence, more dangerous and contain more toxic
chemicals than vapes, so there is a concern about the use of
those products. When I was on the Science and Technology
Committee, I remember looking at all these different products and
the new things on the market. There is a substantial gap in terms
of safety. It may be that they are safer than smoking, but there
are serious concerns about the health effects of heat-not-burn
products—even more significant than those about vapes, which have
been raised in this debate.
I end as I began by paying tribute to my hon. Friend the Member
for Sleaford and North Hykeham for all the work she has done to
drive this important debate. As constituency MPs, we all see this
important and growing issue in our schools and through talking to
young people. We are moving at pace and will continue to do so to
address these challenges. It is important that we calibrate our
approach correctly so that it is effective. We have already done
a number of things, and we stand ready to do more to tackle this
extremely important issue.
2.20pm
I thank everyone who has contributed to this debate. It was
interesting to hear that my right hon. Friend the Member for
Calder Valley () has given up smoking, on
which I congratulate him. I hope he will soon be able to give up
heated tobacco as well; I am sure his health will benefit.
I also thank the SNP spokesperson, the hon. Member for Paisley
and Renfrewshire North (), and the Opposition
spokesperson, the hon. Member for Ilford North (), for their support. I think I am correct in saying
that there was support from all corners of the House for doing
everything possible to ensure that children cannot get their
hands on vapes.
I welcome the measures in the Minister’s speech, particularly
those on education, preventing the distribution of free vapes,
the introduction of the enforcement team and nicotine-free vapes.
I also welcome the consultation, but we need to be quick about
this because more children are vaping every day. That means that
every day more children are becoming addicted and developing a
nicotine habit that they will find difficult to break.
One of the challenges of quitting smoking is giving up nicotine,
and giving up the nicotine in vapes is no different; in fact, it
may be more difficult. I urge the Minister to look very closely
at banning disposables and at marketing. He did not mention this
in his speech, but I do not think that vapes should be advertised
on the kits of any sports team. In shops, vapes are often
positioned in the front of display cabinets where children can
see them. I have seen advertisements for vapes on taxis and
things like that—they should not be there.
The Minister’s review should look closely at flavours and
colours, because I do not think they are necessary for
stop-smoking devices. He should regulate where they can be sold
and increase the penalties for those that break the rules. The
Minister did not mention tax. I appreciate that that is a matter
for the Treasury, but vaping companies should be taxed heavily to
lift their pocket money. That is the right way to go.
As well as education, children need support. A huge number of
children are already addicted to vaping products, and they need
support. When they realise and are educated about the harms and
wish to quit, they will need support and help to do so.
Perhaps my most important ask of the Minister is for him to look
at the latest evidence. The 95% safer approach was predicated on
evidence that is not terribly robust and on a study that is
nearly 10 years old. It was based on an apparent absence of
evidence of harm, but we are now seeing evidence of harm. I urge
him to review the evidence. We are in a situation in which our
headteachers are telling us that children must be able to vape so
that they can discuss the flavours to fit in with their peer
group, and we must get away from that. This issue is urgent and I
urge the Minister to act quickly.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered electronic cigarette use.
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