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Tuesday, April 16, 2024

DepEd backs stricter measures on e-cigarettes

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The Department of Education on Sunday expressed its full support for stricter measures to Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems or Electronic Non-Nicotine Delivery Systems, also known as e-cigarettes or “vapes.”

“On matters related to substance use prevention, education alone is not enough. In their classes, we teach our learners how to reject harmful substances. Outside these classes, we need policies and structures that will help reinforce our learners’ health-promoting choices, complementing what we teach them in school,” Education Secretary Leonor Briones said in a news release on Sunday.

She issued the statement in support of the Senate public hearing on the provisions of the Vaporized Nicotine Products Regulation Act.

The Senate hearing explored the regulations on age restriction, online trade and product flavors, among other things.

Vapor products and heated tobacco products are already regulated under Republic Act 11467 signed by President Rodrigo Duterte in January 2020.

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Under RA 11467, selling vapor products and HTPs to people below 21 years old is prohibited. However, the pending bills in the Senate, similar to the substitute bill at the House of Representatives, intend to reduce the minimum age of restriction to 18.

“This a real concern for us in DepEd. Before the pandemic, the Philippine Pediatric Society had coordinated with us to explore the determinants of e-cigarette use among [Grades 7 to 9] learners [and the results showed] that 6.7 percent [of the 11,500 learners surveyed] have tried and are using e-cigarettes,” Briones said.

The PPS survey results showed that the top reasons for using vape among learners are online accessibility (32 percent), varied flavors (22 percent) and the belief that e-cigarettes are safer than tobacco (17 percent).

Banking on the survey results, Briones joined the calls of “fellow health champions” for discussions on tobacco product regulations to be led by the Senate Committee on Health led by Senator Christopher Go.

“Especially now that we are in a pandemic, I appeal to our legislators to approach the issue from a health perspective. We are all first-hand witnesses of how any threat or attack to a country’s health system eventually affects every other sector of public life, from economics to education,” Briones said.

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