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| ===Deborah Arnott=== | | ===Deborah Arnott=== |
| *[https://ash.org.uk/media-and-news/ash-spokespeople/ Bio and Photo] | | *[https://ash.org.uk/media-and-news/ash-spokespeople/ Bio and Photo] / [http://tobacco.cleartheair.org.hk/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/bmj.h3317.full_.pdf Quote Source] / [https://twitter.com/DeborahArnott Follow on Twitter] |
| *[http://tobacco.cleartheair.org.hk/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/bmj.h3317.full_.pdf Quote Source]
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| Over at ASH, however, Arnott summarily dismisses such fears. “There are people in the public health community who are obsessed by e-cigarettes,” she says. “This idea that it renormalises smoking is absolute bullshit.” Furthermore, she insists, “There is no evidence so far that it is a gateway into | | Over at ASH, however, Arnott summarily dismisses such fears. “There are people in the public health community who are obsessed by e-cigarettes,” she says. “This idea that it renormalises smoking is absolute bullshit.” Furthermore, she insists, “There is no evidence so far that it is a gateway into |
| smoking for young people.” ASH’s concern, she says, “is quite the reverse—that because there is so much bad publicity about them, people’s understanding about the relative risk of smoking and e-cigarettes is being undermined. The risk is that smokers who could potentially use these as an alternative to smoking are being discouraged, and that’s not a good thing.” For Arnott, the concept of harm reduction boils down to a simple proposition: “Do you want the tobacco industry to carry on making cigarettes which are highly addictive and kill when used as intended, or do you want them to move to a product which is much nearer licensed nicotine replacement therapy and is unlikely to kill anyone?” | | smoking for young people.” ASH’s concern, she says, “is quite the reverse—that because there is so much bad publicity about them, people’s understanding about the relative risk of smoking and e-cigarettes is being undermined. The risk is that smokers who could potentially use these as an alternative to smoking are being discouraged, and that’s not a good thing.” For Arnott, the concept of harm reduction boils down to a simple proposition: “Do you want the tobacco industry to carry on making cigarettes which are highly addictive and kill when used as intended, or do you want them to move to a product which is much nearer licensed nicotine replacement therapy and is unlikely to kill anyone?” |