English Story

中国专家呼吁管控电子烟

Experts in China are calling for the control of electronic cigarettes, as the public lacks awareness of the potential health effects of vaping, reports thepaper.cn.
 
中国的专家们呼吁对电子烟进行控制,因为公众对电子烟潜在的健康威胁缺乏认知。
 
Invented by a Chinese pharmacist in 2003, e-cigarettes are commonly believed to be safer than tobacco cigarettes and may help smokers quit. But some experts are warning that e-cigarettes are not harmless, and have called into question their usefulness in helping people to stop smoking.
 
E-cigarettes usually contains nicotine, which makes second-hand smoke from e-cigarettes harmful, according to Zhang Jianshu, president of the Beijing Tobacco Control Association.
 
And Professor Cui Xiaobo from Capital Medical University said that e-cigarettes can be an ineffective smoking cessation aid. This is because breaking the addition to smoking involves breaking the addiction to nicotine, which is found in both regular cigarettes and e-cigarettes. Professor Cui also said that research shows young people start using e-cigarettes because they are fashionable, but then often start smoking regular cigarettes.
 
There are currently no regulations on e-cigarettes in China when it comes to tobacco control, health care, or production management. And the use of e-cigarettes is not prohibited in public places, because it is not categorized as a tobacco product.
 
The general public has started to pay more attention to the use of e-cigarettes after several recent incidents. Last month, an Air China co-pilot sent a plane into an emergency descent after he turned off the plane's air supply so he could use an e-cigarette. And earlier this week, a passenger used an e-cigarette in a Beijing subway carriage, sparking complaints.
 
"We are currently calling for the relevant departments to introduce a regulation to standardize and control e-cigarettes, and make it prohibited like tobacco is in public place," said Zhang Jianshu.
 
Some individual cities have taken steps to regulate e-cigarettes. In one example, authorities in Hangzhou have included inhaling or exhaling harmful vapor under the definition of smoking.