June 20, 2024
Banning disposable vape products or increasing their prices could lead young people to revert to smoking tobacco, a new study has suggested.
The research, ‘Young People’s use of Disposable Vapes: A Qualitative Study’, published in the journal Addiction, revealed that young people see smoking and vaping as interchangeable, but are far more aware of the potential harms of vaping than they are of the dangers of smoking.
Many of the young people questioned also believed that if disposable vapes were banned they would be able to continue using them by stockpiling or purchasing illegally.
The study, led by the University of East Anglia, recruited 29 young people aged between 16 and 20 and a range of methods were used to probe their motivations, experiences and perceptions of using disposable vapes.
The key findings include:
The researchers say the study suggests that young people’s use of disposable vapes could be reduced by tighter enforcement of age of sale and restricting packaging and marketing.
However, they also say the evidence suggests these sorts of interventions have the potential for significant unintended consequences, including increased use of illicit vapes and, most worryingly, increased tobacco use amongst young people.
“Therefore any interventions to combat use of disposables may need to be accompanied by policy interventions to reduce access to illicit vapes and tobacco and increase awareness of the relative harms of tobacco compared to vapes,” Caitlin Notley, a professor of addiction sciences at UEA’s Norwich Medical School, said.