Just how safe is Vaping compared to smoking ordinary Cigarettes?

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The Kenya Tobacco Control Alliance (KETCA) has condemned the launch of e-cigarettes and other tobacco alternatives that promote smoking.

UK-based agency, Knowledge Action Change, last week launched a report in which it declared e-cigarettes (vapes), heat-not-burn devices and pasteurised oral tobacco as low-risk alternatives to tobacco.

KETCA chairman Joel Gitali on Sunday criticised the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR) report saying the organisation was employing deceit in its marketing strategies.

“This is a sad situation. They are capitalising on greed and joblessness by some people in Africa to spread their poisonous ideas,” Gitali said.

In a statement to newsrooms on Friday, Gitali said research has already showed the new products were extremely dangerous.

“We cannot rely on falsehood fronted by researchers who are paid and controlled by tobacco companies. This is a trap meant to ensure that as many smokers as possible remain hooked,” he said.

Kenya Tobacco Control Alliance chairman Joel Gitali

Kenya Tobacco Control Alliance chairman Joel Gitali 
Image: TRIZZA KIMANI

The GSTHR report said vaping is at least 95 per cent safer than smoking tobacco.

It also presented findings on tobacco harm reduction, showing many smokers have switched to safer products, a move it said had dramatically reduced the risks associated with smoking.

But Gitali said several studies have shown the new nicotine delivery products being marketed by cigarette manufacturers were extremely harmful.

“Those who intend to quit will continue to provide market to tobacco companies by switching to the new but equally, if not more, harmful products,” he said.

“Those who have not picked up the smoking habit are being lured by being cheated that the new products are safe.” 

E-cigarettes vapor also includes potentially harmful substances such as nicotine, diacetyl (a chemical linked to a lung disease), cancer-causing chemicals, volatile organic compounds, and heavy metals such as nickel, tin, and lead.

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