Close Menu
  • Home
  • International
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Law
  • Business
  • Education
  • Vaping

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Welsh Liberal Democrats Pass Motion Protecting Cannabis Patients

April 16, 2026

FDA’s New Hemp CBD Enforcement Move Is Encouraging, But Congress Still Needs To Enact Real Regulations (Op-Ed)

April 16, 2026

Building Smarter Cannabis Operations Through Partnership – Cannabis & Tech Today

April 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Saturday, June 6
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Smoke Insights
  • Home
  • International

    Hannah Deacon Campaign Launched in Memory of Mum Who Changed Medical Cannabis Law

    March 5, 2026

    Medical Cannabis Patient Cleared of Wrongful Driving Conviction

    February 19, 2026

    US State Considers Medical Cannabis in Female Orgasm Disorder

    February 5, 2026

    First Placebo-Controlled Trial Finds Cannabis Effective For Migraine

    January 28, 2026

    Using Data for Advanced Access

    January 24, 2026
  • News

    Welsh Liberal Democrats Pass Motion Protecting Cannabis Patients

    April 16, 2026

    FDA’s New Hemp CBD Enforcement Move Is Encouraging, But Congress Still Needs To Enact Real Regulations (Op-Ed)

    April 16, 2026

    Rhode Island Marijuana Officials Appeal Federal Court Ruling Blocking Licensing Lottery

    April 15, 2026

    Idaho Medical Marijuana Campaign Has More Than 100,000 Signatures For Legalization Ballot Measure As Deadline Nears

    April 15, 2026

    Ireland Moves Forward With Review of Medical Cannabis Programme

    April 14, 2026
  • Lifestyle

    Too $hort, Vic Mensa And More Pull Up For Season 2 Of ‘Spitfire With Shirley Ju’

    March 24, 2026

    WNBA Offers To End Marijuana Testing For Women’s Basketball Players As Part Of Reported Deal With Union

    March 20, 2026

    How Weed Nuns Helped Shape Paul Thomas Anderson’s Oscar-Winning DiCaprio Epic

    March 18, 2026

    I Enforced Weed Laws. Now I Regret It.

    March 14, 2026

    Censored Everywhere, Cinematic Anyway: The New Weed Ad Playbook

    March 12, 2026
  • Law

    Army Reserve Major Loses Promotion Due to Ownership in New York Cannabis Company

    April 15, 2026

    Medicare Coverage for Some Hemp-Derived Products Now Available

    April 9, 2026

    Virginia Cannabis Regulator Posts Job Openings As Governor Considers Adult-Use Sales

    April 3, 2026

    Texas Ban on Intoxicating Hemp Flower and Vapes Takes Effect

    April 2, 2026

    Mississippi Senate Passes Medical Cannabis Reform Bill with ‘Right to Try’ Provisions  

    March 25, 2026
  • Business

    Building Smarter Cannabis Operations Through Partnership – Cannabis & Tech Today

    April 16, 2026

    Target Expands Involvement In Hemp THC Drinks Market With 72 New Licenses In Minnesota

    April 14, 2026

    From Unbankable to Bankable – Cannabis & Tech Today

    April 13, 2026

    Top Moments from Cannabis Means Business 2025 in New York City – Cannabis & Tech Today

    April 11, 2026

    Marijuana Sales Are Rising And Alcohol Is On The Decline As Consumer Preferences Evolve, Government Data In Canada Shows

    April 10, 2026
  • Education

    Vaporizing Marijuana Reduces Harmful Inhaled Byproducts By 99% Compared To Joint Smoking, New Study Shows

    April 16, 2026

    Your Ultimate Guide to St. Paul’s Premier Sampling Event

    April 14, 2026

    Why do you feel thirsty even after drinking water? The Science of True Hydration – Buy CBD Oil India | Licensed Under Ministry of Ayush | Awshad Buy CBD Oil India | Licensed Under Ministry of Ayush

    April 12, 2026

    THC Potency Inflated on Retail Marijuana in Colorado – Cannabis & Tech Today

    April 10, 2026

    Legalizing Marijuana For Recreational Or Medical Use Leads To Reductions In Different Types Of Crime, Study Finds

    April 8, 2026
  • Vaping

    A Destructive Global Tobacco Policy Shift? Prohibition Reigns Supreme as Evidence Keeps Being Ignored

    April 16, 2026

    Review: Drag 6 – Voopoo

    April 14, 2026

    VAPORESSO and DOJO Light Up TPE 2026 with Innovation and Champion Spirit

    April 12, 2026

    Cancer Risk and Nicotine: Separating Science from Sensationalism in the Vaping Debate

    April 10, 2026

    The EU’s Proposed Restricitive Nicotine Policies Seem all the More Ridiculous in the Face of Sweden’s Success

    April 8, 2026
Smoke Insights
You are at:Home»Vaping»As The WHO Blurs Smoking – Vaping Line, Leaders Must Demand Transparency for Continued Funding
Vaping

As The WHO Blurs Smoking – Vaping Line, Leaders Must Demand Transparency for Continued Funding

adminBy adminFebruary 12, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

For anyone who has watched family members suffer and die from smoking-related disease, tobacco control is not an abstract policy debate, it is deeply personal. Lung cancer, cardiovascular disease, and chronic respiratory illness are not caused by nicotine itself, but by the toxic products of combustion. That distinction matters, because misunderstanding it costs lives.

Yet global tobacco control policy, led by the World Health Organization (WHO), continues to blur this crucial line. Instead of accelerating the transition away from smoking, it increasingly promotes prohibitionist policies that restrict or stigmatise safer nicotine alternatives. The result is slower declines in smoking, expanding illicit markets, and missed opportunities to prevent disease.

This growing disconnect has prompted the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) to call on governments across the region to urgently reassess their commitment to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). That call has taken on new urgency following the United States’ withdrawal from the WHO on 22 January 2026, citing mismanagement, and New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters’ demand for scrutiny of funding directed toward what he described as “unelected globalist bureaucrats.”

Harm reduction recommended in theory but ignored in practice

At the heart of CAPHRA’s concern is a fundamental contradiction. The FCTC itself explicitly includes harm reduction in Article 1(d). Yet in practice, WHO policy guidance consistently opposes or undermines the very tools that have proven most effective at reducing smoking—vaping, heated tobacco products, and nicotine pouches.

“The treaty recognises harm reduction, but current practice has not consistently supported the tools that can accelerate the decline of smoking,” said Nancy Loucas, CAPHRA’s Executive Coordinator. “Governments should be asking whether the system is aligned with its own mandate and with real-world evidence.”

That evidence is not speculative. Combustible tobacco remains the leading cause of preventable death worldwide. Non-combustible nicotine products eliminate combustion entirely, dramatically reducing exposure to carcinogens and toxicants. Public health authorities in countries such as the UK and New Zealand have repeatedly acknowledged that vaping is substantially less harmful than smoking and an effective cessation aid. Yet WHO guidance increasingly treats switching away from cigarettes as a “risk of substitution”—a phrase that reveals how ideology has overtaken evidence.

Inside the FCTC’s COP11

Concerns about the direction of global tobacco control were sharpened following remarks by Jindřich Vobořil, a veteran public health and drug policy specialist with decades of experience in evidence-based regulation. Reflecting on his participation at the WHO’s COP11 meeting in Geneva, Vobořil described the process as deeply troubling and increasingly detached from scientific and public health objectives.

Vobořil said COP11 discussions included extreme proposals, such as criminalising legal nicotine companies—ironically backed by countries like China that profit from state tobacco monopolies while exporting vapes, exposing a credibility gap. Harm reduction advocates and consumers were excluded, while well-funded NGOs dominated debate, sidelining evidence-based perspectives. And of course, instead of examining real-world successes in Sweden, Japan, the UK and New Zealand, delegates focused on disputed theoretical risks, undermining both public health and institutional legitimacy.

When prohibition replaces regulation

Across the Asia-Pacific region, the consequences of this approach are very visible. Countries which restrict or ban safer nicotine products, such as Australia, often see smoking rates decline more slowly while illicit markets flourish. This pattern mirrors global experience. High taxes and blanket bans do not eliminate demand; they displace it. Illicit tobacco and unregulated vaping products thrive precisely where legal, regulated alternatives are unavailable. This not only undermines public health goals but strengthens criminal supply chains and removes consumer protections altogether.

Contrast this with countries that have embraced risk-proportionate regulation. New Zealand’s adult smoking rate has fallen to 6.8%, one of the lowest in the world. This decline did not happen through prohibition alone, but through firm regulation paired with widespread access to safer alternatives.

Public health experts such as former Action on Smoking and Health UK director Clive Bates have repeatedly criticised the FCTC process for failing to incorporate evidence from jurisdictions achieving rapid smoking declines through harm reduction, such as Sweden.

The United Kingdom offers similar lessons. Government-backed “Swap to Stop” initiatives encourage adult smokers to switch to vaping, supported by behavioural counselling. Local authority data show quit rates exceeding 50% in some regions. These outcomes are not theoretical, they translate directly into fewer hospital admissions, fewer cancer diagnoses, and fewer funerals.

The WHO’s dangerous cancer messaging

Meanwhile, nowhere is the WHO’s resistance to harm reduction more damaging than in its cancer messaging. The fifth edition of the European Code Against Cancer, released in late 2025, removed critical nuance present in earlier editions. Whereas the 2014 edition clearly explained that nicotine is not the cause of cancer and acknowledged vaping’s lower risk compared to smoking, the latest version collapses smoking and vaping into a single warning category.

This change is not cosmetic. It fundamentally alters public understanding. When people are told simply “Do not smoke. Do not use any form of tobacco or vaping products,” without explanation, many incorrectly conclude that vaping is as dangerous as smoking. This misperception is already widespread among clinicians and the public, and it discourages smokers from switching to safer alternatives.

The same document goes further, explicitly calling for heavy taxation and restrictions on all nicotine products, including e-cigarettes and pouches, despite acknowledging that long-term cancer links have not been established. The role of these products in smoking cessation is conspicuously absent.

No, harm reduction is not an industry spin

Equating tobacco harm reduction with “Big Tobacco” is as illogical as equating opioid harm reduction with pharmaceutical companies that manufacture Methadone.

The WHO often frames harm reduction as a marketing tactic used by nicotine companies. This argument collapses under scrutiny. Harm reduction is a long-established public health framework, widely accepted in areas such as HIV prevention and opioid use. It recognises a simple reality: people do not all quit risky behaviours at once, but risk can still be reduced.

Modern vaping products were not invented by tobacco companies. They were developed by Hon Lik, a pharmacist trying to quit smoking after his father developed lung cancer. Tobacco companies entered the market years later, responding to consumer demand already created by grassroots efforts. Equating tobacco harm reduction with “Big Tobacco” is as illogical as equating opioid harm reduction with pharmaceutical companies that manufacture Methadone.

Governments should be demanding transparency

Tobacco harm reduction experts argue that governments funding the WHO system should demand accountability. And equally important: continued support for the FCTC should be conditional on transparency, meaningful engagement with independent scientists and consumers, and performance indicators based on outcomes, such as smoking prevalence, switching rates, and disease trends, not the number of bans imposed.

To remain relevant, the WHO and its FCTC must evolve. A structured, risk-proportionate framework for all nicotine products would allow countries to share evidence, learn from regulatory successes, and evaluate policy honestly. The choice faced is no longer a theoritcal one: governments can continue funding and following a system that resists evidence and perpetuates smoking, or they can demand a modern approach grounded in science, compassion, and measurable public health success.

The goal should never be ideological purity. It should be fewer cancers, fewer premature deaths, and fewer families left behind wondering why lifesaving alternatives were kept out of reach



Source link

Blurs Continued Demand funding leaders Line Smoking Transparency Vaping
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleNixamide Benefits for People Quitting Nicotine: A Biological Hack
Next Article Legalising cannabis reduces opioid use by people who inject drugs
admin

Related Posts

A Destructive Global Tobacco Policy Shift? Prohibition Reigns Supreme as Evidence Keeps Being Ignored

April 16, 2026

Vaporizing Marijuana Reduces Harmful Inhaled Byproducts By 99% Compared To Joint Smoking, New Study Shows

April 16, 2026

Review: Drag 6 – Voopoo

April 14, 2026

Comments are closed.

Our Picks

Welsh Liberal Democrats Pass Motion Protecting Cannabis Patients

April 16, 2026

FDA’s New Hemp CBD Enforcement Move Is Encouraging, But Congress Still Needs To Enact Real Regulations (Op-Ed)

April 16, 2026

Building Smarter Cannabis Operations Through Partnership – Cannabis & Tech Today

April 16, 2026

A Destructive Global Tobacco Policy Shift? Prohibition Reigns Supreme as Evidence Keeps Being Ignored

April 16, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
News

Welsh Liberal Democrats Pass Motion Protecting Cannabis Patients

By adminApril 16, 20260

The Welsh Liberal Democrats have passed a motion designed to safeguard medical cannabis patients and…

FDA’s New Hemp CBD Enforcement Move Is Encouraging, But Congress Still Needs To Enact Real Regulations (Op-Ed)

April 16, 2026

Building Smarter Cannabis Operations Through Partnership – Cannabis & Tech Today

April 16, 2026

A Destructive Global Tobacco Policy Shift? Prohibition Reigns Supreme as Evidence Keeps Being Ignored

April 16, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Smoke Unlimited about Weed & CBD vaping.

From Our Partners
About Us
About Us

Get all the current news stories, latest trends and legislation regarding cannabidiol, products, usages and its benefits. So don’t miss out any buzz and stay tuned! We offer a minute to minute updates regarding Marijuana industry.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Our Picks

Welsh Liberal Democrats Pass Motion Protecting Cannabis Patients

April 16, 2026

FDA’s New Hemp CBD Enforcement Move Is Encouraging, But Congress Still Needs To Enact Real Regulations (Op-Ed)

April 16, 2026

Building Smarter Cannabis Operations Through Partnership – Cannabis & Tech Today

April 16, 2026
Sponsors
Copyright © 2026. SmokeInsights.com
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.