New Delhi: Over 1000 students and teachers along with several public health organisations have appealed to the Prime Minister to enforce a complete ban on e-cigarettes and other electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS).
In a letter, they said there is gross misinformation about harmful effects of these products among adolescents as they perceive these as ‘fun devices’ that are safe.
“We are school students and are extremely concerned about a new type of product called e-cigarettes that is gaining alarming popularity among our peers. We find that students as young as 13 are using e-cigarettes as a fun device and later on getting addicted to it. There is lot of misinformation about their harmful effects even among parents and teachers,” a representative of 1,000 school students said in the letter.
Last month, several doctors had written to the Prime Minister seeking a ban on these devices before it becomes an ‘epidemic in India’, especially among the youth.
Students lauded the Union Health ministry for its advisory as a timely measure to tackle the new emerging threat of e-cigarettes and sought a ban on these products that are easily available in the market and online.
“We urge you to please safeguard the youth from falling prey to the new emerging form of addictive products. We request you to ban products like e-cigarettes in India before several young people get addicted to them,” the letter said.
In August last year, the Health Ministry had issued an advisory to all states and UTs to stop manufacture, sale and import of ENDS after the Delhi High Court took strong exception of the Centre’s delay in coming up with appropriate measures to tackle the ‘new emerging threat’ of e-cigarettes in the country.
Union Health Secretary, Preeti Sudan, has also written to the Commerce Secretary to block entry of JUUL, a US based company, manufacturing vaping devices like e-cigarettes, from entering India. She has said, the entry of JUUL products, if not prevented, could undermine efforts taken by the government towards tobacco control.
Thirteen states in India – Punjab, Karnataka, Kerala, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Pondicherry, Jharkhand and Mizoram – have already banned use and sale of e-cigarettes, Vape and E-Hookah.