Why is the Royal College of Physicians concluding the ecigs help smokers quit when a large body of evidence shows that, as consumer products, they don’t?

On April 18, 2024 the UK Royal College of Physicians published E-cigarettes and Harm Reduction: An Evidence Review, the latest in a series of reports it has published since 2007 endorsing e-cigarettes for harm reduction.  In this report, the RCP recommends that “e-cigarettes should be promoted as an effective means of helping people who smokeContinue reading “Why is the Royal College of Physicians concluding the ecigs help smokers quit when a large body of evidence shows that, as consumer products, they don’t?”

5 year longitudinal study finds e-cigs and cigs have similar risks for respiratory disease and COPD; dual use is worse

Beibei Song and colleagues’ new paper, Impact of electronic cigarette usage on the onset of respiratory symptoms and COPD among Chinese adults, finds that e-cigarettes and cigarettes pose similar risks for causing respiratory symptoms and chronic obstructive disease (COPD) in Chinese adults. Dual use is worse than using either product alone. This is a veryContinue reading “5 year longitudinal study finds e-cigs and cigs have similar risks for respiratory disease and COPD; dual use is worse”

COP10 delegates need to base decisions on latest e-cig evidence, not the same old studies e-cig advocates promote

In the lead up to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control Tenth Conference of the Parties that starts today, advocates for e-cigarettes and other “reduced harm” tobacco products have been busy again arguing that delegates should embrace these products. In reviewing some of this material, I have been struck by the fact that theirContinue reading “COP10 delegates need to base decisions on latest e-cig evidence, not the same old studies e-cig advocates promote”