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Is vaping safe?

In the UK, doctors say switching from smoking to e-cigarettes will save lives; in the US, there have been deaths linked to vaping, but the evidence is mixed. How risky is it?

After deaths in the US and bans around the world, how risky are e-cigarettes? In some countries, smokeless cigarettes are all the rage. In the UK, doctors say if smokers switch from tobacco to e-cigarettes, it will save lives. But in the US, where the authorities are investigating an outbreak of lung injury linked to vaping, they’re advising vapers to consider stopping. In India, Mexico and dozens of other countries, vaping is banned altogether. It’s a confused international picture.

Vaping is still relatively new and scientists are still researching how harmful it may be in the long-term. What we do know is that every year, eight million people die worldwide as a consequence of smoking tobacco. What are the potential health risks associated with vaping? We’ll find out from our expert witnesses, who include a neuroscientist, a pulmonary critical care doctor and a professor of nicotine and tobacco studies.

(A young woman smoking an electronic cigarette at the vape shop. Credit: Getty images)

Available now

24 minutes

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Broadcasts

  • Thu 24 Oct 201902:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201903:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201905:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201906:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201913:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201914:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201917:06GMT
  • Thu 24 Oct 201919:06GMT
  • Sat 26 Oct 201916:06GMT
  • Sun 27 Oct 201901:06GMT
  • Mon 28 Oct 201900:06GMT
  • Mon 28 Oct 201909:06GMT
  • Sat 30 Nov 201917:30GMT

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