ㅡㅑㅍ개

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 3

Australia to ban non-prescription vapes in biggest

smoking reforms in a decade


theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/may/01/australia-to-ban-non-prescription-vapes-in-biggest-smoking-
reforms-in-a-decade

The Australian government will ban the importation of nonprescription vaping products –
including those that do not contain nicotine – in the most significant tobacco and vaping
control measures in the country in a decade.

To tackle youth vaping, minimum quality standards for vapes will be introduced including
restricting flavours, colours and other ingredients. Vape products will require
pharmaceutical-like packaging, and the allowed nicotine concentrations and volumes will
be reduced. All single-use, disposable vapes will be banned.

Speaking on ABC’s Q&A on Monday night, the health minister, Mark Butler, said that the
tobacco industry was trying to create a “new generation of nicotine addicts” through
vaping and that he was “determined to stamp out this public health menace”.

It follows an inquiry into vaping reforms led by the drugs regulator, the Therapeutic Goods
Administration (TGA), with submissions from health professional bodies, public health
associations, individual health professionals and university researchers overwhelmingly
supporting tightening border controls.

Many public health experts and bodies submitted to the inquiry that border controls
should also be placed on non-nicotine vaping products to prevent mislabelling and
exploitation of import loopholes. It follows manufacturers falsely labelling products

1/3
containing nicotine as “nicotine-free” to get around import restrictions, leaving children
easily able to buy vapes, often unknowingly inhaling nicotine and becoming addicted.

The government will also work with states and territories to end vape sales in
convenience stores and other retailers. Prescriptions for nicotine vaping products for
smokers trying to quit tobacco will be made easier to obtain, with stronger standards
around the vaping products that can be bought in pharmacies so people can be assured
of the content of the products.

Australia’s health minister, Mark Butler, will expand on the reforms in a speech to the
National Press Club on Tuesday, where he is expected to say vaping has become “the
biggest loophole in Australian history” and announce that next Tuesday’s federal budget
will include $234m in funding for tobacco and vaping reforms, the biggest since plain
packaging of tobacco products was introduced.

“Vaping was sold to governments and communities around the world as a therapeutic
product to help long-term smokers quit,” an excerpt from Butler’s speech says.

“It was not sold as a recreational product – especially not one for our kids. But that is
what it has become: the biggest loophole in Australian history.”

The funding includes $63m for an evidence-based public health information campaign to
discourage people from taking up smoking and vaping and encourage more people to
quit. Public health experts have long been calling for a renewed anti-smoking advertising
campaign. There will be $30m invested in support programs to help Australians quit, and
education and training in smoking and nicotine cessation among health practitioners will
be strengthened.

A further $140m will be allocated to the Tackling Indigenous Smoking program which will
be extended and also widened to reduce vaping among First Nations people.

“This is a product targeted at our kids, sold alongside lollies and chocolate bars,” Butler is
expected to tell the Press Club.

2/3
“Vaping has become the No 1 behavioural issue in high schools. And it’s becoming
widespread in primary schools. Over the past 12 months, Victoria’s poisons hotline has
taken 50 calls about children under four becoming sick from ingesting or using a vape.

“Just like they did with smoking, big tobacco has taken another addictive product,
wrapped it in shiny packaging and added flavours to create a new generation of nicotine
addicts.

Butler will say those who vape are three times as likely to take up smoking, “which
explains why under-25s are the only cohort in the community currently recording an
increase in smoking rates”.

“This must end,” he will tell the Press Club.

The Public Health Association of Australia’s CEO, Terry Slevin, described vaping as a
“public health disaster”. He said the reforms would see Australia re-establish itself as a
world leader in tobacco and vaping control.

“The ubiquitous and aggressive marketing of vaping products, particularly to children, is a


worldwide scourge,” he said.

“For smokers who are legitimately trying to quit using vapes, a pathway is and should be
in place. But that should not be at the cost of creating a new generation of nicotine
addicts among the young.”

He said Butler should be congratulated for “responding to the evidence and standing up
to a powerful and wealthy industry”.

Australian Council on Smoking and Health’s co-CEO, Laura Hunter, said it was
encouraging to see a government take “decisive action” against a harmful industry.

“We also acknowledge the commitment to end the sales of vapes from retail settings
which have mushroomed in every city and suburb, and gone a long way to normalising
vaping culture,” she said.

“While we have yet to examine the detail of these announcements, the focus on strong
action to support the medical prescription model, further education on both smoking and
vaping, and increased cessation support is a breath of fresh air in a crisis situation
clouded by murky operators peddling misinformation at the expense of our health.”

3/3

You might also like