Popular on TelAve
- How Strategic WooCommerce Development and Digital Marketing Helped a Fashion Ecommerce Business Increase Revenue by 3X - 214
- Curious About Mensa? DFW Event Offers a 1-Day Immersion - 214
- ParkLens Launches AI-Powered Parking Sign Decoder to Help Drivers Avoid Costly Parking Tickets - 193
- Wellness Technology Distributor Helping People Set Up Wellness Center Businesses - 189
- TechHouse Earns Highly Selective Microsoft Support Badge - 180
- USA Med Bed Helping Home Care Patients with Refurbished Hill Rom Hospital Beds - 161
- Umbrella Becomes First FinOps Platform to Support AWS Billing Transfer Onboarding - 104
- Bangxing Silicone Revolutionizes Silicone Baby Product Partnerships: Low MOQ Support + VIP Long-Term Win-Win Programs
- HRC Fertility's Dr. Christo G. Zouves Appointed to San Mateo County Medical Association Board of Directors
- RAS AP Consulting Advances to RFP Stage in Heidelberg Materials' SAP Vendor & Customer Master Data Modernization Initiative
CAPHRA warns push for ASEAN vape ban ignores science
TelAve News/10897691
MANILA, Philippines - TelAve -- CAPHRA has warned that efforts by Singapore and the Philippines to promote a regional vape ban through ASEAN would ignore growing evidence on tobacco harm reduction and risk locking the region into failed prohibitionist policy.
The warning follows reports that the health ministers of Singapore and the Philippines agreed during a bilateral meeting at the World Health Assembly to explore joint advocacy for a vape ban among ASEAN member states.
CAPHRA Executive Coordinator Nancy Loucas said ASEAN governments should not be pushed into a ban-first approach that disregards relative risk and real-world evidence.
"ASEAN should not ban first and examine the evidence later. You do not reduce smoking by removing lower-risk alternatives while cigarettes remain widely available."
The proposal is particularly troubling because it comes as support grows internationally for more pragmatic tobacco control strategies that distinguish combustible tobacco from lower-risk smoke-free alternatives. Former WHO leaders and senior global health figures have recently argued that tobacco harm reduction should be part of public health policy, especially where smoking-related disease remains high.
More on TelAve News
"The call for evidence-based harm reduction is not coming only from consumers," Loucas said. "Respected former global health leaders are also warning that ideology should not override science when lives are at stake."
CAPHRA said Singapore is entitled to maintain its own domestic policy but should not seek to turn that position into a regional standard for all ASEAN countries. The Philippines, where vapour products are legal, should be especially careful about backing a regional prohibition that would override national legislative realities and ignore the experience of Filipino consumers who have already switched away from smoking.
Clarisse Virgino of CAPHRA Philippines said regional policymaking must not become a shortcut for anti-harm-reduction agendas.
"The Philippines should not help build a regional ban that ignores Filipino consumers who have already moved away from cigarettes," Virgino said. "ASEAN governments must make policy based on evidence, health outcomes, and their own national realities, not political signalling dressed up as consensus."
More on TelAve News
CAPHRA said it supports strong youth protections, strict product standards, enforcement against illegal sales, and penalties for bad actors, but stressed that prohibition is not the same as effective regulation. Broad bans do not eliminate demand; they shift it into informal and illicit markets, reduce product oversight, and make it harder for adult smokers to access lower-risk alternatives.
"Bans protect the cigarette trade more than they protect public health," Loucas said. "If governments remove regulated alternatives while combustible tobacco remains entrenched, many smokers will simply stay with the products that do the most harm."
CAPHRA is calling on ASEAN governments to reject any rushed regional vape ban and instead pursue risk-proportionate regulation that addresses local issues with local solutions.
https://www.caphraorg.net
The warning follows reports that the health ministers of Singapore and the Philippines agreed during a bilateral meeting at the World Health Assembly to explore joint advocacy for a vape ban among ASEAN member states.
CAPHRA Executive Coordinator Nancy Loucas said ASEAN governments should not be pushed into a ban-first approach that disregards relative risk and real-world evidence.
"ASEAN should not ban first and examine the evidence later. You do not reduce smoking by removing lower-risk alternatives while cigarettes remain widely available."
The proposal is particularly troubling because it comes as support grows internationally for more pragmatic tobacco control strategies that distinguish combustible tobacco from lower-risk smoke-free alternatives. Former WHO leaders and senior global health figures have recently argued that tobacco harm reduction should be part of public health policy, especially where smoking-related disease remains high.
More on TelAve News
- A Brave Little Hero with Four Paws
- Revenue Optics Expands Its Private Equity Practice as Sponsors Move Inside Sales to the Center of Distribution Value Creation
- Ecuador Freedom Launches First Scheduled Motorcycle Tour of Northern Peru's Lost Kingdoms
- Lineus Medical Completes Financial Restructuring with KMF Investments- Launching a New Era for SafeBreak
- Neuro Recovery Institute Showcases Emerging Immersive Neuro-Rehabilitation Technology at Clinical Innovation Open House
"The call for evidence-based harm reduction is not coming only from consumers," Loucas said. "Respected former global health leaders are also warning that ideology should not override science when lives are at stake."
CAPHRA said Singapore is entitled to maintain its own domestic policy but should not seek to turn that position into a regional standard for all ASEAN countries. The Philippines, where vapour products are legal, should be especially careful about backing a regional prohibition that would override national legislative realities and ignore the experience of Filipino consumers who have already switched away from smoking.
Clarisse Virgino of CAPHRA Philippines said regional policymaking must not become a shortcut for anti-harm-reduction agendas.
"The Philippines should not help build a regional ban that ignores Filipino consumers who have already moved away from cigarettes," Virgino said. "ASEAN governments must make policy based on evidence, health outcomes, and their own national realities, not political signalling dressed up as consensus."
More on TelAve News
- How Huawei Grew from Leadership in Wireless to AI: Industry Analyst Jeff Kagan Comments
- Community, Conservation & Waterwise Inspiration Bloom on June 6
- Industrial and systems engineers celebrate key leaders in the field at IISE Annual Conference
- Cosanostra Miami Rises as the Best Latin Nightclub in Miami in Under Two Years From its Opening
- CCHR Leader's 50-Year Fight for Psychiatric Drug Victims Gains National Momentum
CAPHRA said it supports strong youth protections, strict product standards, enforcement against illegal sales, and penalties for bad actors, but stressed that prohibition is not the same as effective regulation. Broad bans do not eliminate demand; they shift it into informal and illicit markets, reduce product oversight, and make it harder for adult smokers to access lower-risk alternatives.
"Bans protect the cigarette trade more than they protect public health," Loucas said. "If governments remove regulated alternatives while combustible tobacco remains entrenched, many smokers will simply stay with the products that do the most harm."
CAPHRA is calling on ASEAN governments to reject any rushed regional vape ban and instead pursue risk-proportionate regulation that addresses local issues with local solutions.
https://www.caphraorg.net
Source: CAPHRA
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- FDA-Cleared AI Neuropsychiatry Platform, Million-Dose Ketamine Manufacturing and Presidential Psychedelic Initiative Drive Growing Momentum for NRXP
- AI Velocity Trading Launches Institutional-Grade Algorithmic Engine for Retail Investors
- Huawei Releases Full-Stack Data Infrastructure Solutions for AI Data Centers: Industry Analyst Jeff Kagan Offers Comment
- Speaker and Certified Coach Syrena N. Williams Debuts Powerful New Book on Healing, Identity, and Wholeness
- ParkLens Launches AI-Powered Parking Sign Decoder to Help Drivers Avoid Costly Parking Tickets
- Kryptokasinot.io Raises Concerns Over Proposed Cryptocurrency Restrictions in Finland's Gambling Reform
- New Home of the Month: Spacious Luxury Meets Modern Design in The Bristol at Heritage at Manalapan
- The Calida Group Announces Sale of Ely at Fort Apache for $57.5 Million
- Summer Festivals in Gunma Prefecture: Song, Dance, and Vibrant Color – Get There Via Tobu Railway!
- Jetperch Introduces Joulescope JS320 Precision Energy Analyzer for Low-Power Embedded System Development
- AI-Powered Trading Bots Are Transforming Forex, Gold, and Digital Markets as DefiHash Expands Intelligent Quantitative Infrastructure
- Early Bird Registration Open for FLYING HY, the Top Hydrogen and Battery Electric Aviation Event
- Century Fasteners Corp. Hires Tony Marano as Director of Human Resources
- Accelerating Toward Commercialization as FDA Momentum, AI Neurotherapy & Manufacturing Expansion Drive Multi-Catalyst Growth Story; N A S D A Q: NRXP
- New Wisconsin Report Shows Most Plane Crashes Happen Outside Major Hubs
- Book Florida Keys Accommodations Early with KeysCaribbean and Save 15 Percent
- Color Card Administrator Highlights Growing Enterprise Demand for Workflow Orchestration in Enterprise Business Card Governance
- Tennessee Laws Lead with Psychotropic Drug Testing in Mass Shooting Cases and Comprehensive Reporting: CCHR Urges Nationwide Adoption
- Curious About Mensa? DFW Event Offers a 1-Day Immersion
- Why Only Some Industry Analyst Briefings Are Successful, according to Analyst Jeff Kagan
