England could prescribe e-cigarettes on National Health Service – CNN

The UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is publishing updated guidance which could allow e-cigarette products to be prescribed for those who want to stop smoking, the UK government said in a statement on Friday.

Manufacturers of e-cigarette products can now approach the MHRA with their products, which will go through the same regulatory approval process as other medicines available on the country’s NHS.

If products are approved, it would mean England would be the first country in the world to prescribe e-cigarettes licensed as a medical product, the government said.

In Australia, consumers require a doctor’s prescription to legally access nicotine e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine, according to legislation passed by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (the TGA) that came into effect on 1 October.

However are currently no approved nicotine vaping products in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG), with doctors required to submit individual applications for temporary supply.

Linda Bauld, Bruce and John Usher Chair in Public Health at the University of Edinburgh, said the news was “excellent.”

“While there is good evidence that e-cigarettes available as consumer products can help smokers to quit, we also know that up to one in three smokers in the UK has not tried these devices,” she told the Science Media Centre. “Smokers have concerns about safety and misperceptions about the relative risks of e-cigarettes compared with tobacco.

Bauld said that the cost of these devices acts as a barrier for some.

“The option of having approved devices that could be prescribed would reassure smokers about relative risks and also assist in reaching those least able to afford e-cigarettes,” she said.

“Smoking remains the leading preventable cause of inequalities in health so anything we can do to help less affluent smokers in particular to quit is a step in the right direction.”

However, e-cigarettes are not risk free, the government conceded.

“E-cigarettes contain nicotine and are not risk free, but expert reviews from the UK and US have been clear that the regulated e-cigarettes are less harmful than smoking,” the government said in a statement.

“A medicinally licensed e-cigarette would have to pass even more rigorous safety checks,” it added.

According to the NHS, while e-cigarettes do not produce tar or carbon monoxide — two of the most harmful elements in tobacco smoke — “the liquid and vapour contain some potentially harmful chemicals also found in cigarette smoke, but at much lower levels.”

Alan Boobis, …….

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2021/10/29/uk/e-cigarette-england-intl-scli-gbr/index.html

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