Britain | E-cigarettes

Vaping among schoolchildren has become a moral panic in Britain

E-cigarettes are bad, but other things are far worse

Person vapes on the Custard Shoppe stand during Vape Jam.
Image: Getty Images
|Barnet

CURIOUS ODOURS swirl in the bathrooms of Copthall School, an all-girls comprehensive just north of London. Pupils who puff on e-cigarettes say that “lemon and lime” and “sour apple” are the most popular hits. But it’s not only flavours that appeal: as ever, being a part of the crowd matters. Kids who vape are “more accepted,” says Manha, a 13-year-old (who has, nonetheless, resisted). Poonam Dave, a senior member of staff, estimates a quarter of the children use them. That’s broadly in line with a recent survey by an anti-smoking group, ASH, suggesting a fifth of 11- to 17-year-olds have tried vaping.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Fears over vapes”

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