Australian hearing reveals children’s extreme addiction to nicotine, sleeping with vapes under their pillows

Australian hearing reveals children’s extreme addiction to nicotine, sleeping with vapes under their pillows

Children ⁢are sleeping with vaping ‌devices under‌ their ‌pillow because they are so addicted to nicotine they can’t ​get ⁣through the night without a hit, a hearing ⁤into tobacco reforms has heard.

Speaking on behalf of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (Racgp), Dr Hester Wilson said young people‍ are‍ being “inundated” with ⁤advertisements⁣ promoting vaping on social ‌media and are grappling with nicotine⁤ addiction.

“I have one‍ patient that I’m seeing ⁢at the moment who‍ has a vape ⁢that he ⁢keeps under his pillow,” Wilson ‌said on ⁤Wednesday at public hearings ⁤into amendments to the public health ‍(tobacco and⁣ other products) bill.

‘I’ve lost ⁣my children to vaping’: ⁢the tragic ⁢stories behind the ‍soaring ‍rates of youth addictionRead more

“He wakes up during the night to have more‌ inhalations of the vape. He puts his vape up his sleeve at school so that he can surreptitiously vape during ⁤class.​ He is seeking help for that ⁣and he’s finding it really difficult to make‌ the change.”

In September, ⁤VicHealth and Quit released research⁢ revealing ⁢e-cigarette retailers are advertising ⁤vaping products on social‍ media ⁢specifically designed for teenagers to ‌easily ​hide from parents and teachers.

If the ​bill amendments‍ pass,‌ updated⁤ and improved graphic warnings will be added to tobacco packaging and included on ⁢individual cigarettes. The ‌use of specified additives in ⁣tobacco products like menthols would⁣ also ⁣be ‌banned.

New ‍measures to discourage‌ smoking and prevent ​the promotion ‌of ‌vaping and ‌e-cigarettes⁢ would also be introduced, such as plain packaging⁢ on vapes.

The bill is separate to a series of reforms still being developed in‍ collaboration between‌ the state, ‌territory and ⁤federal governments to⁣ crack down on the ​importation and sale of vapes,​ including⁤ banning non-nicotine products.

Wilson said the amendments to ⁣the bill should pass urgently,⁢ but said a ⁣further⁣ amendment ⁣should be made to ⁤ban tobacco and vaping industry donations to political‍ parties and‍ politicians.

This was echoed by the president of the‌ NSW branch of the Australian Medical Association, Dr Michael‍ Bonning, who said all political parties must “stop accepting⁣ sponsorship gifts or political donations‌ from⁤ the tobacco industry, as⁢ this clearly ‍compromises government ⁣policy on public health matters”.

He said after seeing‌ a decline in nicotine use for years, vaping had ‌driven addiction up again.

“More and more young​ people are vaping and smoking after a prolonged decline in nicotine ‍product use,” Bonning said.

“[There are] ‌more smokers, more vapers, ⁢more chronic cough, new lung ⁢disease in young people … people ‌who through their ⁣vapes are ingesting the equivalent of three-to-four ‍packs of cigarettes ⁤per day, and with it the ingestion of other harmful chemicals ⁣and⁣ heavy metals which ‍will impact their bodies over the coming years and decades.”

A study published on Wednesday in the International Journal⁤ of Drug Policy found that 45% of Australian adolescents…

2023-11-01 00:24:58
Original from www.theguardian.com

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