More Canadian youth are choosing electronic cigarettes over their traditional tobacco counterpart, according to recently released government statistics. Among youth aged 15–19, 20% have tried vaping, compared to 11% who smoke tobacco, states the Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey.
The vaping rate also hovers around 20% among young adults aged 20–24, which falls closer to the 18% smoking rate for that age group. Both of these vaping rates for young people exceed the national average. Only 9% of Canadians aged 15 and up have ever tried an e-cigarette.
“We’ve never had a snapshot like this,” said Margaret Bernhardt-Lowdon, executive director of the Manitoba Lung Association.
She called the rates of youth experimentation with e-cigarettes “concerning,” and would like to see a ban for minors. E-cigarettes are not regulated like tobacco products, and therefore don’t have restrictions related to age, use in public spaces or advertising.
Due to the lack of restrictions, there has been a drastic shift in the distribution and availability of e-cigarettes over the past five years. Specialty “vape shops” selling only e-cigarette products have been cropping up nationwide.
In the last two years in particular, the growth has been exponential, says Kate Ackerman, a founding director of the Electronic Cigarette Trade Association of Canada.
E-cigarettes are legal in Canada, as long as they don’t contain nicotine. Because nicotine is classified as a drug by Health Canada, it is regulated under the Food and Drugs Act. The federal government has banned the sale of nicotine e-liquid for electronic cigarettes for both adults and minors, but the products are still widely accessible despite the prohibition. About a quarter of users reported that the last e-cigarette they used contained nicotine.
“We’ve been telling Health Canada for years now that e-cigarettes with nicotine are readily available in the Canadian market despite the fact that they are illegal,” says Melodie Tilson, policy director for the Non-Smokers’ Rights Association. Retailers became bolder in their marketing and sales when it became clear that Health Canada was not enforcing their regulations, she says.
Health Canada has been issuing cease-and-desist orders to vape shops for several years, but according to Tilson, there has been no follow-up. “When complaints are registered, there is no action.”