E-ciggies help 45% smokers quit
Cape Town -
Forty-five percent of South African smokers who used
e-cigarettes were able to quit tobacco smoking within two
months, a new SA study shows.
In the first local medical study on the efficiency of
electronic cigarettes to help smokers kick the habit, a team
of doctors supplied 349 patients with Twisp electronic
cigarettes, over a period of eight weeks.
Of Dutch origin, the Twisp e-cigarette is an electronic
device that delivers nicotine through vapour but without the
tar, carcinogens or smoke found in standard cigarettes.
All participating doctors agreed that e-cigarettes are a
significantly more healthy alternative to conventional
smoking.
The study's outcome revealed that:
- 6% of smokers quit within two weeks increasing to 45%
within eight weeks.
- 52% of all patients reported both increased levels of
energy and visible improvement in their physical appearance
- When asked what factors about smoking tobacco cigarettes
were the hardest to give up, 49% of patients said nicotine
cravings and 24% the habit itself. Twenty-seven percent of
all participating smokers said that a combination of all
factors (the habit, nicotine, the taste and feeling of
smoking) made it hard to quit.
- When asked if an e-cigarette could act as an agent to
overcome all the physical and psychological challenges to
quit tobacco smoking, all doctors said "yes".
'Non-toxic'
Dr Clifford Hulley, one of the participating medical
professionals in the survey, reported that "an e-cigarette
is the most effective treatment method on the market for
quitting tobacco smoking".
Prof Martin Veller, Head Vascular Surgeon at the University
of the Witwatersrand, who also participated in the project,
added that e-cigarettes have the appearance of normal
tobacco cigarettes but are non-toxic.
"Motivated by my wife's experience, who smoked traditional
cigarettes heavily until the moment she replaced them with
electronic cigarettes, I have advised my patients to
consider e-cigarettes as an alternative nicotine source."
According to Dr Kishore Deva, a Pretoria doctor who quit
smoking using Twisp over a six week period, "around 10 to 15
Twisp puffs are equivalent to the same amount of nicotine
delivered by a tobacco cigarette".
He added that the nicotine, present in e-cigarettes, is not
responsible for the health risks that tobacco cigarettes
hold.
Tobacco-free
Earlier this year Health New Zealand carried out trials into
the safety of e-cigarettes. According to the head of
research Dr Murray Laugeson, the test found that
e-cigarettes were very safe relative to cigarettes, and also
safe in absolute terms on all measurements.
"Using micro-electronics, an e-cigrarette vaporises,
separately for each puff, very small quantities of nicotine
dissolved in propylene glycol, two small well-known
molecules with excellent safety profiles, into a fine
aerosol.
"Each puff contains one third to one half the nicotine in a
tobacco cigarette's puff. The cartridge liquid is
tobacco-free and no combustion occurs."
According to Matt Salmon, president of the Electronic
Cigarette Association (Eca) in the USA, available data
indicates that electronic cigarettes reduce the risk of
illness and death to under 1% of the risk posed by tobacco
cigarettes "which are responsible for 400 000 deaths per
year in the US - more than Aids, drugs, homicides, fires and
auto accidents combined".