The following international resources have been assembled to make media access to information easier on the public policy, public health, science and legal aspects of the electronic cigarettes topic.
Harm Reduction in Nicotine Addiction: Helping People Who Can’t Quit
Royal College of Physicians
- This 252-page report from the Tobacco Control Group of The College concludes that tobacco cigarettes are freely available, medicinal nicotine products are available but regulations restrict availability and effectiveness, and that the combination limits gains in public health by denying smokers the right to choose safer nicotine products.
Interview of Joel Niztkin, MD, MPH, DPA, FACPM
Chair, Tobacco Control Task Force
American Association of Public Health Physicians
- “We have every reason to believe the hazard posed by electronic cigarettes would be much lower than 1% of that posed by (tobacco) cigarettes,” says Dr. Nitzkin in this online interview. “The testing guidelines in the current tobacco act (circulating through Congress) would represent a ban on electronic cigarettes, (yet) if we get all tobacco smokers to switch from regular cigarettes (to electronic cigarettes), we would reduce the US death toll from 400,000 a year to less than 4,000, maybe as low as 400.”
Stories from Electronic Cigarette Users
Care2 Petition Site
- Lost in a lot the discussion on electronic cigarettes is the voice of the consumer. From firsthand experience, read what thousands of electronic cigarette users think about the innovative products and the importance of not withholding them from the market.
Tobacco Harm Reduction Project
University of Alberta, School of Public Health
- Suggesting that smokers have options other than quitting entirely is controversial, but it should not be. Almost all of public health should be devoted to reducing risks and harms, not eliminating them entirely. A good analogy is seatbelts. Instead of telling people that they should just quit driving, cars and roads are made as safe as possible. Similarly, people are not told to quit playing hockey or bicycling, but instead it is suggested they wear helmets. This site offers research, essays and insightful links.
Interview of David Sweanor, BA, JD
Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa
Global Harm Reduction Strategist and Expert
- “The vast majority of the harm caused by smoking is from the method of nicotine delivery rather than from the nicotine itself. There would be a parallel problem if people got caffeine from smoking tea leaves rather than making an infusion of these leaves in hot water,” says Sweanor in this online interview. “Everything has risks, so simply pointing out that something is ‘not safe’ shows a person to be either ignorant or disingenuous (because) anyone who believes (tobacco) cigarettes are no more hazardous than electronic cigarettes (needs) a remedial course in basic sciences.”
Tobacco Harm Reduction: The Best Hope for Averting Deaths
Global Health and Innovation Summit at Yale
Carl V. Phillips, MPP, PhD and Karyn Heavner, PhD
- This presentation points out that anti-tobacco efforts in the Western World have struggled to reduce tobacco use by more than half, and in the process have vilified nicotine, misinformed the public about its risk, and established mindsets that know resist the a solution that will improve public health.
Not Smoking Cessation, But Tobacco Harm Reduction
Harm Reduction Journal
- This article introduces the idea of harm reduction, as an alternative to tobacco smoking and smoking cessation. With millions of people unable, or at least unwilling, to quit smoking, the article recommends that regulatory restrictions on the manufacture and sale of nicotine products be revised, including acknowledging that the use of such products is vastly safer than smoking tobacco.
Smoking and Tobacco Use in the US
Department of Human and Health Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- This section of the CDC web sites provides tables, charts and statistics about the consumption, economics and health effects of tobacco cigarettes in the US.
World Health Organization, Tobacco Free Initiative
- This section of the WHO web site provides tables, charts and statistics about the consumption, economics and health effects of tobacco cigarettes in the world.
