Guidance and Information
Young people and vaping
That’s why there’s a minimum age of sale for vaping products in the UK. It is illegal to sell nicotine vaping products to anyone under 18 or for adults to buy them on behalf of under-18s.
Vaping is however not risk-free. We do not know the long-term effects of many vape ingredients and companies deliberately inducing nicotine addiction in others to maximise profits is not in the interests of the person being addicted. Non-smokers should therefore be encouraged not to start vaping, and in particular not to use vapes containing ingredients such as nicotine, the main aim of which is to addict them.
Vapes and E-Cigarettes
- ASH Addressing common myths about vaping
- ASH Brief for Local Authorities on Youth Vaping (2022)
- ASH Guidance for School Vaping Policies
- Information and Guidance on vaping for Secondary-aged learners
- Bad filling about this: Vaping causes your teeth to ROT
- Data on vaping in children and young people in Gloucestershire is available here
- E-Cigarettes and Nicotine Containing Products (NCPs)
- E-Cig Guidance for SW CIC Nurses
- E-Cig Key Messages for CIC Nurses
- Vaping - is it a risk-free option? - BBC News
- GHLL Vaping Lesson for Secondary Education
- Why Australia decided to quit its vaping habit - BBC News
- Why is Vaping Bad for You? - YouTube video
- Use of vapes (e-cigarettes) among young people in Great Britian - Ash
Click here to read the latest information on vapes from 'Talk to Frank'
Click here to read about the risks of taking cannabis edibles.
Department of Health - Creating a smoke free generation and tackling youth vaping
The Prime Minister has set out plans to build a better and brighter future for our children. This includes the introduction of a new law to stop children who turn 14 this year or younger from ever legally being sold cigarettes and a further crackdown on youth vaping.
Key measures have been announced by the Department of Health on how this will be achieved.
The full publication can be found here.
How the drug works varies from person to person
- How you might feel
- Dizzy, headache, nauseous or mildly stimulated, relaxed.
- Read more about how it feels
- Effects on your body
- Increased blood pressure and heart rate, faster breathing.
- Read more about how it feels
- How long it takes to work
- Effects peak 5 - 10 minutes after your first puff.
- Read more about how long it takes to work
- How long the effects last
- The effects last two to three hours after your last puff.
- Read more about how long the effects last
- Common risks
- Nicotine makes the heart beat much faster. This can make you feel nauseous/sick the first time you use it. Nicotine is addictive and can be hard to stop using once you’ve started. Vaping is a lot less harmful than smoking but it doesn’t mean it’s harmless.
- Read more about the risks
Trading Standards
Trading Standards can respond to reports regarding the sale of illegal vapes and under-age sales in a number of ways, ranging from disrupting sales by seizure of illegal product to prosecution of sellers where they continue despite advice and warnings from our officers.
Information about shops selling to young people, or generally selling illegal vapes, can be submitted to Trading Standards art tradingstandards@gloucestershire.gov.uk
Be assured Trading Standards will never reveal the source of any report without permission.
Tagged under: vaping, e-cigarettes