4.2 Article

E-cigarette Use and Regulation in South Africa: a Synthesis of Evidence in Response to Industry Efforts to Undermine Product Regulation

Journal

CURRENT ADDICTION REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 363-372

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s40429-022-00451-6

Keywords

E-cigarettes; South Africa; E-cigarette industry; E-cigarette regulation

Funding

  1. Africa Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF) [33]

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This narrative review examines the published scientific literature on e-cigarettes in South Africa and responds to reports commissioned by the e-cigarette industry about proposed regulations. The review finds that e-cigarette users in South Africa are more numerous than industry reports suggest. Contrary to industry claims, e-cigarettes are more expensive than regular cigarettes, and regulating them as tobacco products rather than medicines would benefit public health.
Purpose of Review This narrative review of the published scientific literature on e-cigarettes in South Africa examines and responds to reports commissioned by the e-cigarette industry about proposed regulations in South Africa. Recent Findings The results of a nationally representative study suggest that the number of e-cigarette users is much larger than the number provided by the industry-commissioned reports. Contrary to industry claims, e-cigarettes are more expensive than regular cigarettes and the proposed regulation, the Control of Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Bill, which aims to regulate e-cigarettes as tobacco products rather than as medicines would benefit public health. Furthermore, the government's proposed tax on e-cigarettes would generate much-needed revenue for the government and reduce e-cigarette uptake by youths. Summary E-cigarettes were introduced to the South African markets about a decade ago. E-cigarette consumption has grown exponentially without a commensurate decrease in cigarette smoking. Yet, e-cigarettes are not yet regulated as tobacco products as the e-cigarette industry continues to aggressively lobby against the passing of a proposed legislation that would have achieved this. This legislation, the Control of tobacco products and electronic delivery systems bill, is yet to be passed into law over 4 years after its inception. This narrative review was conducted on peer-reviewed South African literature on e-cigarettes up to December 2021, supplemented by a search of the grey literature, government publications, and industrycommissioned reports. We found that reports commissioned by the e-cigarette industry misrepresented the potential impact of restricting e-cigarette advertisements and promotions. Furthermore, by underestimating the prevalence of e-cigarette use in the population, these reports also attenuated the revenue-generating ability of potential e-cigarette excise taxes as proposed by the South African National Treasury Department. The regulation of e-cigarettes would benefit public health in South Africa.

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