Nicotine / THR - Statements from Organizations: Difference between revisions
Line 159: | Line 159: | ||
=='''[https://www.heartuk.org.uk/healthy-living/quit-smoking Heart UK]'''== | =='''[https://www.heartuk.org.uk/healthy-living/quit-smoking Heart UK]'''== | ||
[[file:HeartUK.jpg|center]] | [[file:HeartUK.jpg|center]] | ||
==[https://smokefreeaction.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/MHSP-ecig-briefing-2020-v2.pdf This document has been endorsed by the following members of the Mental Health and Smoking Partnership]== | ==[https://smokefreeaction.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/MHSP-ecig-briefing-2020-v2.pdf This document has been endorsed by the following members of the Mental Health and Smoking Partnership]== |
Revision as of 22:38, 29 May 2023
"Tobacco Harm Reduction = SAFER than smoking"
The items list below may also be found on this Google Doc
Multinational pt. 1/International
World Health Organization EURO Office
European Parliament
SCENIHR - European Commission Directorate-General, Health & Consumer Protection
Cochrane systematic evidence review
- Source
- 78 scientific studies (including >34 randomized control trials) involving 22,052 participants in a dozen countries. This 2022 update replaces their 2021 evidence review, based on 61 studies, which found “moderate certainty evidence.”
15 past presidents of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT)
- Source
- NOTE: This is not a statement by the SRNT.
The Tobacco Atlas
- The Tobacco Atlas is a collaborative publication by Vital Strategies & Tobacconomics at the Institute for Health Research and Policy.
- Vital Strategies was formed out of a merger between World Lung Foundation and The Union.
- Source
Multinational Pt. 2 - United Kingdom (Or any of the following individually*: England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales)
- Even if the location is not in the UK
UK Department of Health, Towards a Smokefree Generation - A Tobacco Control Plan for England
“The evidence is increasingly clear that e-cigarettes are significantly less harmful to health than smoking tobacco. The government will seek to support consumers in stopping smoking and adopting the use of less harmful nicotine products.”
Office for Health Improvement & Disparities (UK)
Public Health England
Royal College of Physicians
British Medical Association
Cancer Research UK
British Lung Foundation
Asthma + Lung UK
“E-cigarettes are a relatively new stop smoking tool, but if used correctly represent a big opportunity to reduce the harms caused by smoking, and to help smokers quit their addiction. They are thought to be at least 95% less harmful to health than tobacco, and evidence suggests that for many they are an effective means to give up smoking. …Nearly a third of smokers have never tried vaping. There is a big opportunity to encourage as many smokers as possible to transition to vaping, and in doing so reduce their health risks.”
Primary Care Respiratory Society
Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation
British Thoracic Society
British Heart Foundation
The British Psychological Society #1 #2
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
Royal College of General Practitioners (UK)
Royal Society for Public Health
Stroke Association UK
Action on Smoking and Health UK
National Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Royal Pharmaceutical Society
Royal College of Midwives
LGBT Foundation
UK Teratology Information Service
Faculty of Public Health (UK)
UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies
House of Commons Science and Technology Committee (UK)
Heart UK
This document has been endorsed by the following members of the Mental Health and Smoking Partnership
Statement on the dangers posed by e-cigarettes
- Drug Science UK
Health Information and Quality Authority (Ireland)
Irish Heart Foundation, Irish Cancer Society +7 Endorsements
Health Service Executive Ireland - #1 and #2
National Health Service Scotland +19 Endorsements
Public Health Wales
Australia (See Also: "Australia and New Zealand")
Therapeutic Goods Administration (Australia)
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners +14 Endorsements
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (Australia)
Australia and New Zealand
Royal Australian & New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP)
Royal Australasian College of Physicians
Drug and Alcohol Nurses of Australasia
Belgium
Belgian Superior Health Council
“Yes, the e-cigarette has its risks, but is clearly less harmful than a traditional tobacco cigarette. According to the Council, the e-cigarette can therefore be a tool to give up tobacco completely.” [Google Translate]
Canada
Government of Canada
Health Canada
“If you are an adult that currently smokes, switching completely to vaping is a less harmful option than continuing to smoke. …Vaping is not known to cause Popcorn lung.” (January 2023) “While vaping products are not harmless, vaping exposes people who smoke to lower levels of harmful chemicals than continuing to smoke.” Statement from Minister of Health (January 16 2023).
Canadian Heart & Stroke Foundation
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health +3 organizations - Canadian Lower-Risk Nicotine Use Guidelines (LRNUG)
“Funded by Health Canada’s Substance Use and Addictions Program, the LRNUG has developed several resources to help guide people who use, or are thinking about using nicotine, on how to lower the risk associated with these products. ...E-cigarettes with nicotine may be an effective cessation aid for people who use combustible tobacco. People who switch from combustible tobacco to e-cigarettes will reduce their exposure to numerous toxicants and carcinogens.” Quick Tips: “Using tobacco in forms that don’t burn, like smokeless tobacco or heat-not-burn products, will reduce your exposure to harmful combusted chemicals including carbon monoxide. [You can] further reduce your risk by switching to products that don’t have tobacco like NRT [e.g., nicotine patches or nicotine gum] or e-cigarettes.” Statement by: CAMH - Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Pharmacists for a Smoke-free Canada, The Ontario Tobacco Research Unit, Centre for Effective Practice
Canadian Cancer Society
Canadian Lung Health Foundation
England (See Multinational pt. 2/United Kingdom)
France
French National Academy of Medicine
French National Cancer Institute
French High Council for Public Health
French National Academy of Pharmacy
Collège de la médecine générale (College of General Medicine)
“Concerning the electronic cigarette, we consider it as a risk reduction tool and believe that we should not discourage the smoking patient who is learning to vape with a view to weaning [reducing smoking] by indicating to him that it is necessary to avoid the use concomitant cigarette/e-cigarette.”
Germany
German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment
German Society of Addiction (Deutsche Suchtgesellschaft – Dachverband der Suchtfachgesellschaften)
“In general, one can assume that the vapor from an e-cigarette is much less harmful than conventional cigarette smoke and that the e-cigarette can be used for nicotine withdrawal if guideline-based psychotherapeutic and/or drug treatments for nicotine withdrawal are ineffective or unwanted.”
Ireland (See Multinational pt. 2/United Kingdom)
Isle of Man
Public Health Isle of Man
“E-cigarettes can be a particularly helpful way to stop smoking tobacco especially when combined with a specialist face to face support. Although experts say they are not entirely risk free, they are at least 95% less harmful than tobacco.”
Luxembourg
Fondation Cancer
“The electronic cigarette … does not contain tobacco. The vapor produced does not contain carbon monoxide or carcinogenic substances in significant quantities. Despite a lack of long-term scientific studies, it probably presents a reduced risk compared to tobacco (if not combined with cigarettes). …In general, we recommend that you vape with the most concentrated liquid possible, in order to reduce your consumption of liquid and therefore your exposure to inhaled substances.” [emphasis in original] [Google Translate]
Malaysia
Federation of Private Medical Practitioners' Associations, Malaysia
New Zealand (See Also: "Australia and New Zealand")
New Zealand Ministry of Health
Official New Zealand Ministry of Health Position Statement
“Vaping is not harmless but it is much less harmful than smoking. Vaping has the potential to help people quit smoking and contribute to New Zealand’s Smokefree 2025 goal.” Organizations that support this statement include: Health Promotion Agency/Te Hiringa Hauora (HPA), Hāpai te Hauora/Māori Public Health, New Zealand Medical Association (NZMA), Action for Smokefree 2025 (ASH), National Training Service (NTS), All District Health Boards, Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand, New Zealand Heart Foundation, New Zealand College of Midwives, Parents Care Centre
New Zealand Medical Association
New Zealand Pharmacy Council
Cancer Society of New Zealand
New Zealand Heart Foundation
Asthma & Respiratory Foundation NZ
Quitline NZ
Philippines
House of Representatives Philippines
2018
Scotland (See Multinational pt. 2/United Kingdom)
United Kingdon (See Multinational pt. 2/United Kingdom)
United States
Center for Critical Public Health
American Association of Public Health Physicians
American College of Preventive Medicine
American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
American Society of Addiction Medicine
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine
US Food & Drug Administration #1 #2 #3
National Institute on Drug Abuse
US Centers for Disease Control
Truth Initiative
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK)
American Association for Cancer Research and American Society of Clinical Oncology
American Cancer Society
American Heart Association
Eau Claire, WI Health Department
2022
Uruguay
Uruguayan Council of Ministries
2021
Wales (See Multinational pt. 2/United Kingdom)
Suggestions to add to this page
Association of Directors of Public Health North East Position Statement on Nicotine Vaping
2023: NSW Greens support legalising nicotine vapes
Updated: Position statement on vaping
FDA - Charles Tweet
Gates Foundation
- "Smoking rates are dropping, thanks to price increases associated with tobacco taxes, smoking bans, and other evidence-based practices outlined in the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.Even if these practices are scaled up, however, millions of smokers will still suffer death, disease, and disability. Alternative tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, aren’t harmless, but they may be less harmful. We need to understand whether they could change the course of the smoking epidemic without addicting youth.”
2021: The Sheffield Tobacco Control Board Policy Position on electronic-cigarettes (also known as vaping)
2022: Physician's Research Institute
- While abstinence from tobacco use is the ideal, the next-best result, for individuals who can’t or don’t want to quit nicotine, is movement down the continuum of risk: away from combusted tobacco to a less harmful product. One possible alternative: E-cigarettes.