Doctors encourage e-cigarettes

Doctors in the UK supported electronic cigarettes.

The Royal College of Physicians, which conducted the proficiency exam of doctors and has four separate medical schools, published a report on the subject.

The 200-page report said there is strong evidence that e-cigarettes are much safer than normal cigarettes and help stop smoking.

The report stressed that e-cigarettes can improve the lives of millions of people if they are used at the right doses and under control.

Concerns that e-cigarettes may encourage starting cigarettes were also considered unwarranted and prompted to encourage the use of e-cigarettes as an aid to smoking cessation.

E-cigarettes are considered one of the most popular smoking cessation methods in the UK.

Previously, however, in some parts of the country, these cigarettes have been controversial and attempts have been made to ban the use of them in public places in the Wales region.

Royal College of Physicians, with the support of doctors who use e-cigarettes or products to help stop smoking, said they are more likely to quit smoking again.

In the long term, it was emphasized that e-cigarettes are 95 percent safer than normal cigarettes in terms of harm to health.

Still, e-cigarettes are not completely safe.

"We don't know enough about the long-term effects of e-cigarettes, so we need more research," says Professor Simon Capewell, an expert in public health in the UK.

NEW PRODUCTS

Whatsapp Contact