The agency revealed this data in a concerning tone. “While vaping may be less harmful than the inhalation of smoke from tobacco, it poses risks of nicotine dependence, other substance use, and respiratory and cardiovascular disease,” said Statistics Canada. “It is feared that the widespread adoption of vaping may undermine longer-term reductions in smoking and lead to the re-normalization of tobacco use.”
Meanwhile, countless peer reviewed studies have explained that as long as the increase in vaping is leading to a decrease in smoking, health authorities should not be concerned. Teenagers will always be drawn to experimentation and the ones with the personality type to do so would be experimenting with riskier nicotine products in the absence of vapes. Viewed in this manner, the products should be considered beneficial to public health.
Vaping rates have actually declined
Moreover, the Canadian Tobacco and Vaping Survey, 2020, found that youth vaping has already declined since 2019, and youth daily vaping is at 4.7%, therefore the proposed flavour ban is unnecessary. While a recent Canadian Tobacco and Nicotine Survey has indicated that between 2019 and 2020, there was a 40% drop in smoking rates in this specific age group, from 13.3% to 8%. This figure is encouraging for Health Canada’s no smoking target (5% by 2035) and this 5% target rate has already been achieved among those aged 15-19.
Read Further: Canada’s National Observer
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