Tag: United Kingdom

  • The Wrong Direction

    The Wrong Direction

    Photo: Ded Mityay |Dreamstime

    Current e-cigarette use in Great Britain has declined for the first time, most likely because of misinformation.

    By George Gay

    A number of countries are moving toward severely restricting the flavors that may be included in e-liquids, partly, they say, because certain flavors encourage vaping among young people—“young” being variously defined. Two of three countries that are going down this road and of which I am aware are, at the same time, moving toward bans on the sale of vapor products to young people, and one already has such a ban in place.

    This means that, in these three countries (Denmark, the Netherlands and the U.S.), the proposed bans on generally popular flavors are aimed at discouraging adult consumers from attempting to switch from smoking to vaping and, given that nicotine users are addicted, encouraging vapers to switch back to smoking.

    Nevertheless, these planned flavor bans are being put forward as health initiatives, so the only conclusion that can be drawn from what is going on in these countries is that those promoting the flavor bans believe that smoking is less risky than vaping.

    How did they get to this point? Well, I think that we can rule out that they have been led there by scientists. While there seems to be a band of scientists desperate to prove that vaping is as risky, if not riskier, than smoking, I think I am on safe ground in saying that most scientists well versed in such matters will tell you that vaping is less risky—many would say hugely less risky—than smoking.

    So if those promoting these flavor bans haven’t been led by the science, what has led them to this point? It can’t be politics because, in matters of public health, the politics would be guided by the need to protect people, which takes us back to the science. After all, what better proof could one have of this than the current situation where politicians are being led by the science in making decisions about fighting the coronavirus pandemic? Hmm.

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    Arbitrary choices

    Perhaps it would be wise to take a closer look, and here I move the focus of the story from the three countries mentioned above to Great Britain. At the start of an opinion piece published in The Guardian in October, David Runciman, professor of politics at Cambridge University, quoted the German sociologist, Max Weber, as arguing a century ago that politics can never really follow the science. Later in the piece, Runciman wrote that “[i]n politics, expecting the evidence to point the way does not reduce the arbitrariness of the outcome.” He added that “all political choices are arbitrary to a degree. Using statistics to justify difficult decisions just makes them appear more arbitrary for anyone who happens to disagree.”

    I can see what he is getting at, but this is not to say that politicians should flip a coin to decide policies, so I’m going to turn things around by using some statistics to challenge rather than justify what seem to me to be arbitrary decisions that are already on their way to being made in respect of e-liquid flavors. The reader will have to decide whether the statistics—evidence, science, call it what you will—make the decisions being taken more or less arbitrary.

    The statistics have been taken from a recently published report, “Use of e-cigarettes (vapes) among adults [those over 18] in Great Britain,” which was based on data taken from an annual survey, “Smokefree GB,” carried out for Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) by the market research company YouGov. The survey started to include e-cigarette use in 2010, and the current update includes the results of the 2020 survey carried out in February and March.

    These statistics concern Great Britain, which includes England, Scotland and Wales, but I imagine they would probably reflect, at least partly, the situation in many other countries.

    Let’s start off by looking at what the point of vaping is, viewed solely from the point of view of the smoker and vaper. According to the report, “[a]s in previous years, the main reason given by ex-smokers for vaping is to help them quit (41 percent) and prevent relapse (20 percent)” while “[t]he main reason given by current smokers for vaping is to cut down (24 percent) followed by to help them quit (14 percent) and to prevent relapse (14 percent).” Moreover, the report says that when, in 2019, current vapers were asked about their views on vaping, most e-cigarette users said that improving their health was their number one reason for vaping. “Among all vapers, 60 percent agree that ‘health is my number one reason for taking up e-cigarettes,’” the report said.

    It seems as though, under the current circumstances, these vapers and smokers are making rational decisions about their health, especially given that later in the report, it is noted that recent evidence from a randomized controlled trial showed that vaping was nearly twice as effective as nicotine-replacement therapy (NRT) in helping smokers quit in a Stop Smoking Service setting in England.

    And if the focus is shifted from individual smokers to the wider population, it is worth noting that the report describes how the use of electronic cigarettes is largely confined to current and ex-smokers, with use among never-smokers remaining low, something, I think, that is suggested by the age profile of vapers. “The peak ages for current e-cigarette use in 2019 are among 35 [year-olds to] 44 year-olds (9.5 percent) followed by 45 [year-olds to] 54 year-olds (9.3 percent) and then 25 [year-olds to] 34 year-olds (7.8 percent),” the report says. “The lowest vaping rates by age are 4.3 percent for young adults aged 18 [to] 24 followed by those over 55 at 5.6 percent.”

    John Dunne

    Rational decisions

    This all sounds very encouraging. Generally speaking, those who should have been taking up vaping—smokers—seem to have been doing so while those who shouldn’t have been—never-smokers—haven’t been. But there’s a fly in the ointment. The report says that for the first time (and at a time when there are still nearly 7 million smokers in the country), current e-cigarette use has declined year-on-year from 7.1 percent of the adult population in 2019 to 6.3 percent in 2020—from 3.6 million users to 3.2 million users.

    Unfortunately, this is not surprising. “Misinformation continues to be a huge challenge for the [vapor] industry despite its efforts to make consumers aware of the evidence-based facts, including Public Health England’s statement that vaping is at least 95 percent less harmful than smoking,” said John Dunne, director-general of the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA), in reacting to the report’s findings. “Inaccurate and misleading reporting, together with highly questionable research, gives a negative view of vaping to smokers who may otherwise quit. Even worse, it could make current vapers reconsider whether they’ve made the right move by taking up e-cigarettes.”

    One result of the widespread dissemination of misinformation has been that the proportion of the adult population of Great Britain that thinks vaping is more or equally harmful than smoking is five times higher than it was in 2013, up from 7 percent in 2013 to 37 percent in 2020. But as the report suggests, the likely driver for the decline in e-cigarette use between 2019 and 2020 is the impact of the media coverage of an outbreak of serious lung injury among cannabis vapers in the U.S. “While the cause of this outbreak has since been identified as vitamin E acetate used to adulterate cannabis-containing e-liquids, the media coverage of the initial outbreak was far more prominent than the subsequent explanation or the fact that both vitamin E acetate and THC-containing liquids are banned under U.K. rules,” the report pointed out.

    While some of those opposed to vaping might take comfort from the fact that fewer people correctly identify that vaping is less risky than smoking, they would be wise to hold the celebrations. The report points out, too, that only 34 percent of people correctly identified nicotine-replacement therapy as being much less harmful than smoking.

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    Additional discouragement

    So what would happen if, on top of the above discouragements, the vaping environment was hit by significant reductions in the generally popular flavors that were allowed to be used in e-liquids? It seems to me that there would be two major effects—one of which would negatively affect vaping’s image.

    The second major effect was described in the report itself. In 2019, the researchers asked current e-cigarette users what they would do if flavors were no longer available. “Around one in four said they would still try to get flavors, and just under one in 10 said they would make their own e-liquid,” the report said. “The most popular option after continuing to try to get flavors was using unflavored e-liquids/cartridges. However, just under one in five said that they would either smoke more or revert to smoking, and around the same proportion said that they did not know what they would do. Less than one in 10 said that they would stop vaping.”

    There is some encouragement to be had from that last sentence, but I would worry that it masks some potential major problems. I would be concerned about where those replacement flavors would be sourced because we could be setting the seeds for a serious disease outbreak as happened in the U.S. in 2019. And the idea that people might be forced back to smoking is one that no responsible politician should contemplate. As the U.K. Member of Parliament (MP) Gareth Johnson, a member of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Vaping, was quoted as saying in the UKVIA’s response to the report’s findings: “Vaping is significantly safer than smoking, and false information to the contrary is literally costing lives.”

    What flavors are we talking about? In 2015, the researchers started asking e-cigarette users what flavor they used most often. At that time, tobacco was most popular (38 percent) followed by fruit flavor (25 percent) and menthol (19 percent). Now, fruit flavors are said to be the most popular (32 percent) followed by tobacco (23 percent) and menthol (22 percent). Very few users are using products with no flavors.

    It cannot be denied that there is some conflict here given that fruit flavors are also the choice of many young vapers. One of the report’s references takes the reader to a 2019 report, “Use of e-cigarettes among young people [11–18] in Great Britain,” which states that the most frequently used e-cigarette flavorings for young people have consistently been fruit flavors, the choice of 45 percent of users in 2017, the last time this question was asked. But this has to be set against the fact that, with age restrictions in place, the number of young people vaping is low and should remain low no matter what flavors are available. Under their key findings, the researchers say that data from the 2019 ASH YouGov Smokefree youth GB survey suggest that while some young people, particularly those who have tried smoking, experiment with e-cigarettes, regular use remains low.

    In fact, in reading the 2019 report, I was left with the feeling that young people are not particularly interested in e-cigarettes. I think this was summed up well in a section on brand awareness, which contained the comment, “Unsurprisingly, given the low levels of regular use, 55 percent of those who had ever tried e-cigarettes said they didn’t know what brand they used.”

    Vaping seems to be approaching a watershed at which it cannot afford to be hit by further unnecessary setbacks, such as the withdrawal of some of the most popular e-liquid flavors. “There are still 3.2 million vapers out there who have made the successful switch, but there are also 6.9 million smokers—of which nearly a third have not tried vape products,” said Dunne. “These smokers can still turn to vaping to quit cigarettes and benefit from harm reduction.”

  • MP Backs Special Status Vape Stores

    MP Backs Special Status Vape Stores

    Mark Pawsey MP (Photo: UKVIA)

    U.K. Member of Parliament Mark Pawsey, chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Vaping, has called for vape stores to remain open during the Covid-19 lockdown to safeguard public health.

    “Given its vital role in smoking cessation, even when compared to NRT [nicotine replacement therapy], the case for vaping’s essential status is growing ever stronger,” said Pawsey.

    “Vape retailers do not just provide the tools for harm-reduction, but also the expert advice and support which empowers consumers to make a positive change. Now, more than ever, we should be safeguarding the country’s public health; vaping is an important part of that. Let’s support this sector, and all those who rely on it, by keeping vape stores open.”

    Earlier this week, the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) urged ministers to consider the essential status for vape stores.

    Doug Mutter

    “I have seen first-hand how U.K. vaping has risen to every challenge this year, with new safety measures, business practices and routines,” said John Dunne, director general of the UKVIA in a statement. “The passion for helping people in this industry is unrelenting, no smoker looking to quit is on their own. However, with government help we can do even more, because for many people the support of a face-to-face experience is vital.

    “If the government does not grant essential status to vaping the impact on sales from stores could be as much as 45 percent-50 percent down,” said Doug Mutter, manufacturing and compliance director at VPZ.

  • Royal Navy to Ban Smoking

    Royal Navy to Ban Smoking

    Photo: Ron Porter from Pixabay

    Britain’s sailors will be banned from smoking on board Royal Navy vessels from the start of 2021, reports The Daily Mail. All types of tobacco products will be banned from January, including on ships and submarines.

    According to Forces.net, the plan is to “minimize the negative impact of smoking on operational capability.”

    The smoking ban will also apply to military sites and could even apply to visitors, civil servants and contractors.

    In 1988 the Royal Navy ended its 200-year policy of supplying shore-based staff with cheap cigarettes. Sailors previously received 600 cigarettes a month as well as a daily rum ration.

  • Plea to Classify Vape Shops as Essential

    Plea to Classify Vape Shops as Essential

    Photo: VPZ

    The U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) has asked the U.K. government to reclassify vape shops as essential outlets during the upcoming Covid-19 related national lockdown.

    In a letter directed to Business Secretary Alok Sharma, Small Business Minister Paul Scully and Public Health Minister Jo Churchill, UKVIA Director General John Dunne urged the government to consider the role of the vapor sector in terms of health and the economy.

    John Dunne

    “With vape stores remaining closed for a length of time and without access to their vaping supplies, many vapers and ex-smokers will be at risk of relapse back to smoking at these stressful times,” Dunne wrote.

    “Economically, as I am sure you will know, vaping has been a UK plc success story and has supported the high street through the challenging environment experienced in recent years,” Dunne added. “Ongoing closure of vape shops, which in our opinion are providing an essential service to current vapers and existing smokers, would be hugely detrimental to the sector’s contribution to the national economy and the health of the nation.”

    According to the Office for National Statistics, the U.K. is home to around 7 million adult smokers. Data also shows that currently around 3.2 million people vape in Great Britain.

  • Ploom S Debuts in the United Kingdom

    Ploom S Debuts in the United Kingdom

    Photo: JTI

    Japan Tobacco International (JTI) has launched its Ploom S heated-tobaccodevice in the U.K., reports The Grocer.

    The product will be sold through two Ploom-branded lounges in London, Ploompop-up shops, online at www.ploom.co.uk and through accredited retailers.

    The device is used with tobacco sticks, which are sold separately. The tobaccosticks will be available in four different flavors—flavored tobacco, smoothtobacco, menthol and menthol/berry. The Ploom S device will have arecommended retail price of £89 ($116.06) and the consumables will have arecommended retail price of £4.50 for a pack of 20 sticks.

    “The time is right for JTI to enter this exciting growth segment in the U.K. with aproven product that continues to grow in markets in which we have alreadylaunched,” said JTI U.K. General Manager Dean Gilfillan.

    Ploom S is the second tobacco-heating system available in the U.K., after PhilipMorris International’s IQOS, which launched in 2016.

    Previously, JTI launched Ploom in Japan, Russia and Italy.

  • HMRC Testing U.K.-Only Tracking System

    HMRC Testing U.K.-Only Tracking System

    Photo: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is testing a new U.K.-only track-and-trace system this month to prepare for the country’s full exit from the European Union (EU) on Dec. 31, 2020, reports The Grocer.

    Wholesalers will not need to buy new hardware for the new system, but they will have to upgrade software to comply. Retailers selling directly to the public will not have to make any changes.

    “To minimize changes for businesses, it will be possible to use existing scanning devices,” sand an HMRC spokesman. “However, businesses will need to make arrangements with their scanning equipment solution provider to connect and submit data to the new U.K. gateway.”

    Wholesalers in Northern Ireland will need to submit data to both the new system and the existing EU system; some EU rules will continue to apply in Northern Ireland after the U.K. leaves the EU.

  • UKVIA Appoints Dunne as General Director

    UKVIA Appoints Dunne as General Director

    John Dunne (Photo: UKVIA)

    John Dunne has been confirmed as director general of the UK Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) after a vote by the trade body’s full membership.

    Dunne was previously responsible for the UKVIA’s member recruitment activity, where he oversaw significant growth in membership levels. He is also the UKVIA’s primary media spokesperson on television, radio and in print.

    Dunne has a long and well-respected background in European vaping and has held senior positions at some of the sector’s leading firms. In addition, he has advised industry analysts and financial institutions on the vaping industry, both in the U.K. and globally.

    The new role has been established to support future planned growth of the UKVIA, as it extends its role and influence, while building its membership base significantly.

    “I am honored that the UKVIA membership has put its faith in me.,” said Dunne. “The association is well placed to go from strength to strength, with membership growing consistently despite the challenges of the pandemic.

    “The next 12 months are hugely important to the vaping industry, with the government review of the Tobacco & Related Products Regulations set to shape the future of our sector. It is crucial that we have a unified voice to influence these regulations, for the benefit of the industry and the public health of the nation. We have already started formulating our contribution to the government’s review, working closely with all our members.”

  • Misperceptions About Risk Drive Down Vaping

    Misperceptions About Risk Drive Down Vaping

    The number of vapers in the U.K. declined by 400,000 since last year, despite mounting evidence that e-cigarettes are effective smoking-cessation aids, according to a study commissioned by Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).

    The Health Charity blames a “misguided belief vaping is just as harmful as cigarettes.”

    “About a third of smokers have never even tried an e-cigarette, and less than 20 percent are currently using one,” said Deborah Arnott, CEO of ASH, in a statement. “If many more smokers could be encouraged to give e-cigarettes a go, the latest evidence indicates that many more might successfully quit.”

    Only 39 percent of smokers in the country believe vaping is less harmful than smoking combustible cigarettes.

    This year, there were 3.2 million e-cigarette users in the country, down from 3.6 million in 2019.

    A review conducted by Cochrane suggests vaping could help more people stop smoking.
     
    “There is now evidence that electronic cigarettes with nicotine are likely to increase the chances of quitting [smoking] successfully compared to nicotine gum or patches,” said Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, an expert at the Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group who co-led the review.
     
    The review included evidence from 50 studies around the world.
     
    There was no clear evidence of serious harm resulting from nicotine-containing e-cigarettes, but since the review used a relatively small number of studies, the evidence is still uncertain.
     
    “Scientific consensus holds that electronic cigarettes are considerably less harmful than traditional cigarettes but are not risk-free,” Hartmann-Boyce said.

  • Exposing Claptrap

    Exposing Claptrap

    Photo: Myriam Zilles | PixaBay

    If England wants to achieve its target of reducing smoking incidence to 5 percent by 2030, it should debunk the myriad stories that are presenting vaping in an inaccurately negative light.

    By George Gay

    One figure in a recent report on smoking habits in the U.K. seemed to be of special note. According to the report, “Adult smoking habits in the U.K.: 2019”*, which was published on July 7 by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), 52.7 percent of Great Britain’s smokers say they intend (my emphasis) to quit smoking.

    Only 52.7 percent? That is below the figures usually quoted in respect of the proportion of smokers who want to quit. For instance, according to the September 2018 edition of Public Health England’s (PHE) Health Matters, about 60 percent of England’s smokers wanted (my emphasis) to quit.

    So these figures raise an interesting issue, assuming the numbers are correct and are reasonably comparable*. For one thing, it seems odd that something of the order of 7.3 percent of smokers want to give up but don’t intend to do so because that means more than half a million people are seemingly acting irrationally, even looked at from their own subjective point of view. I mean, if our actions are observed by others, we are probably all seen to be acting irrationally at one time or another, but it is quite another matter for an individual to knowingly act in what she regards to be an irrational manner.

    There could, however, be another explanation for this phenomenon. It could be that roughly half a million smokers in Great Britain have decided that while they want to quit, they are so sure they cannot that they don’t intend to try. If these people are fatalist or determinists, so be it. But it is a different matter if they have been convinced that they cannot quit. And this could be the case. Some of those in tobacco control have seemingly done what they would consider to be an excellent job of convincing smokers that quitting is almost impossible.

    But this, of course, is nonsense. The ONS report also says that “62.5 percent of those who have ever smoked [in Great Britain] said they had quit, based on our estimates from the Opinions and Lifestyle Survey.” Interestingly, the ONS report presents, too, a comparison with the equivalent figure for 1974, 26.7 percent, which perhaps casts doubt on the claim that manufacturers in recent years have rigged formulations to make cigarettes more addictive—whatever more addictive might mean.

    In fact, you would have to doubt whether the 52.7 percent figure is meaningful. The report also says that 21.2 percent of smokers intend to quit within the next three months, so it has to be assumed the other 31.5 percent have put no time limit on their intentions. In this case, I would suggest that while the “intention” expressed by the 21.2 percent of smokers is akin to a student’s multi-colored study plan, the “intention” expressed by the 31.5 percent of smokers who are looking beyond three months is nothing more than a pipe dream.

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    Why it matters

    This is important for the authorities because England has a target of reducing its incidence of smoking to 5 percent or lower by 2030. As of last year, the ONS reports, the incidence was down to 13.9 percent, so if the proportion of smokers in England falls during the next 11 years by the same amount as it fell between 2018 and 2019 in Great Britain (14.7 percent to 14.1 percent), the target is not going to be met.

    The question is: Will the incidence fall by 0.6 of a percentage point year-on-year? In which case, it would drop to 7 percent to 8 percent by 2030. The ONS researchers referred to the 0.6 percentage point fall between 2018 and 2019 as “significant,” so it could be difficult to maintain such a fall every year given that it is probably reasonable to assume that the further the overall percentage falls, the more the smoker base will be reduced to a hard core. On the other hand, the further the overall percentage falls, the smaller the community of smokers will become, which raises the question of how long even committed smokers will continue with their habit once most of their acquaintances no longer join them outside the pub for a smoke.

    And, of course, there is the million-dollar question around what effect the spread of Covid-19 has had and is having on the incidence of smoking. How many smokers are going to believe those who suggest that smoking and/or consuming tobacco or nicotine can help prevent the onset of the disease, and how many are going to worry that, as some claim, smoking and/or the consumption of tobacco or nicotine is likely to make their health outcomes worse if they do contract the disease?

    But there is a billion-dollar question too. Are those intent on stopping smokers quitting their habit by switching to less risky tobacco or nicotine products going to continue to enjoy “success”? It has been said many times that the switch to vaping has stalled in the U.K., something that is strange because public health in the country has generally acted in a reasonably supportive way when it comes to vaping and its benefits. For instance, take this passage from Health Matters:

    “There is a widespread misconception amongst smokers and health professionals that most of the harm of smoking comes from nicotine. This is perhaps the greatest obstacle we face as it leads to both nicotine-replacement therapy (NRT) and e-cigarettes being perceived as harmful, and as a result, smokers may not make a quit attempt using one of these routes.

    Leading health organizations, including the Royal College of Physicians, Royal College of General Practitioners and the British Medical Association have all provided advice on the important role of e-cigarettes in helping smokers to quit.”

    One of the issues that holds smokers back from switching to vaping is that smokers enjoy smoking and will clutch at any straws that help them, in good conscience, to continue with their habit, so if somebody comes along and casts doubt on the safety of consuming nicotine by other means, they will latch on to that doubt, no matter how ludicrous the ideas on which that doubt is based are. As is described in the accompanying piece, even though the lung injury saga of 2019 played out in the U.S. and involved a substance not permitted for vaping in the U.K., it probably damaged the cause of vaping in the U.K.

    And there is no end to such tales. One story precis I saw recently claimed in its first sentence that “New research … shows that there are more unknown dangers associated with vaping.” What is written here makes no sense. More than what? And how do we who are not Donald Rumsfeld know that there are unknown dangers? In addition, the research seemed to assume that flavor molecules that attacked plastic would have the same effect on human tissue—somewhat akin to assuming that your stomach lining ends up looking like the inside of a teapot.

    I cannot help thinking that if progress is to be made in reducing the U.K.’s smoking incidence in line with its 2030 target, organizations such as PHE should, as well as continuing their helpful work in trying to publicize the positive aspects of vaping, act quickly to debunk in the public sphere the myriad stories that are presenting vaping in an inaccurately negative light.

    *The report’s figures come from two separate data sources, with those for the U.K. (England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland) coming from the Annual Population Survey and those for Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland) coming from the Opinion and Lifestyle Survey. I have taken the liberty of conflating some data in respect of Great Britain and England, and I have also conflated data that refers to adult smokers as being over the age of 16 and data referring to adult smokers as over 18. I have done this because it is the concepts behind the figures rather than the figures themselves that are of interest here.

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    Philip Morris’ progress toward a smoke-free England

    Picture of Patrick Muttart
    Patrick Muttart

    It is now about three years since Philip Morris posed the question, Can Britain go smoke-free in the next 10 years? and Tobacco Reporter in July took the opportunity of this anniversary to ask Patrick Muttart, director of external affairs for the U.K. and Ireland at Philip Morris Limited, what progress had been made.

    Tobacco Reporter: Part of the problem that Britain faced three years ago was that while vaping had helped a lot of people quit smoking, the switch from smoking to vaping had, for a number of reasons, stalled. Assuming that there has been some uptick in switching from smoking to the consumption of less-risky products, which products have been responsible for that uptick?

    Philip Morris U.K.: Smoking prevalence rates are falling in the U.K. as more people either quit cigarettes altogether or switch to alternative products. Official figures from the ONS [Office for National Statistics] in July show that the proportion of current smokers in the U.K. has dropped from 14.7 percent in 2018 to 14.1 percent in 2019—continuing a downward trend since 2011. Central to this decline has been the role of smoke-free alternatives, such as e-cigarettes and heated-tobacco and more recently nicotine pouches.

    In Great Britain, nearly 3 million people use an e-cigarette. Despite this, regular e-cigarette use has plateaued in recent years. A growing number of smokers in the U.K. mistakenly believe that vaping is equally or more harmful than smoking following the highly publicized reports in the U.S. of the lung injury outbreak in 2019. The substance identified as the primary cause of the outbreak in the U.S. is banned in regulated vaping products in the U.K. Nevertheless, these false fears have clearly affected smokers’ views towards vaping in the U.K. and come as the number of smokers who intend to quit continues to fall.

    With product development and scientific substantiation working in lockstep together, tobacco manufacturers must therefore offer smoke-free alternatives that adult smokers can have confidence in. This will go some way in easing safety concerns, so smokers aren’t deterred from switching if they cannot quit altogether.

    Philip Morris has invested significantly in its smokefree portfolio to offer products that are a better alternative to smoking and meet adult consumer preferences. IQOS, a heated-tobacco product, produces up to 95 percent less harmful chemicals* compared to cigarettes and by using real tobacco instead of liquid, delivers a more familiar and satisfying tobacco experience.

    In the U.K., heated-tobacco volumes during the second quarter of 2020 increased more than five-fold over the prior year quarter, demonstrating the growing popularity in the category while underlining the huge role that tobacco-based smoke-free products can play in helping people switch to less harmful alternatives.

    Do you think the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) authorization of the marketing in the U.S. of IQOS as a modified-risk tobacco product (MRTP) will help progress toward your smoke-free target in the U.K.?

    The FDA’s authorization of the marketing of IQOS in the U.S. is an important milestone on our journey to becoming smoke-free. It marks the first time that [the] FDA has granted MRTP marketing orders for an innovative electronic alternative to cigarettes.

    Following a multi-year review of PMI’s [Philip Morris International’s] evidence as well as a number of independent studies, the FDA decided that smokers who switch completely from conventional cigarettes to IQOS significantly reduce their exposure to harmful or potentially harmful chemicals in accordance with their interpretation of the U.S. law. Their authorization confirms that IQOS is distinctly different to cigarettes because it has been demonstrated to reduce exposure to harmful chemicals and that this information should be communicated to consumers to help guide their choice.

    While the MRTP designation applies in the U.S., it is consistent with earlier conclusions of other leading regulatory and scientific bodies, including those in the U.K., which found that IQOS emits lower levels of harmful toxicants.

    We believe that this latest decision by the FDA—and its previous decision to grant an oral tobacco alternative a modified-risk status—strengthens the argument for the U.K. to carefully review these next-generation tobacco-based alternatives, which have undergone comprehensive and robust scientific assessment. —G.G.

    *Philip Morris points out that this does not necessarily equal a 95 percent reduction in risk. IQOS is not risk free.

  • Britain Ups Personal Allowance for Tobacco

    Britain Ups Personal Allowance for Tobacco

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    British passengers traveling to EU countries will be able to take advantage of duty-free shopping from January 2021, according to HM Treasury.

    This means that passengers will be able to buy duty-free alcohol and tobacco products, where available, in British ports, airports, international train stations and aboard ships, trains and planes.

    The amount that passengers can bring back with them from non-EU countries will also be significantly increased and extended to EU countries.

    The new U.K. inbound personal allowances are 200 cigarettes or 100 cigarillos or 50 cigars or 250 grams of tobacco or 200 tobacco-heating sticks or any proportional combination of the above

    Following its departure from the EU, the British government has been reevaluating import duties.

    Health advocates criticized the new rules. “Anything that increases the availability of tobacco is a negative step for public health,” a spokesperson for the British Medical Association was quoted as saying by The Independent. “Each year there are nearly half a million hospital admissions in England because of smoking in England and nearly 80,000 deaths annually.”