New data from Action on Smoking and Health UK found more than half of ex-smokers in Great Britain who quit in the past five years – amounting to 2.7 million adults – used a vape in their last quit attempt.
Further, it revealed the main motivations for vaping amongst current smokers included to cut down on smoking, protect others from the risk of second-hand smoke or to help them quit.
Alarmingly, the leading public health charity also reported that misperceptions around vaping are at an all time high, with 50% of smokers wrongly believing vaping to be as or more harmful when compared with smoking. This is despite the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities maintaining vaping poses a ‘small fraction of the risks’ and a raft of trusted health organisations, including the NHS, Cancer Research UK and the Royal College of Physicians, all acknowledging vaping as a safer alternative.
The new data also found that, while current and ever use of vaping amongst young people has decreased between 2023 and 2024, under 18s are still accessing these age-gated products.
UKVIA Director General John Dunne said: “The latest figures from ASH UK once again highlight the stop smoking credentials of vaping for adults and reinforce the instrumental role these products have and must continue to play in stubbing out the health burden of smoking for good.
“That said, if vaping is to reach its full potential in supporting the smokefree ambition, action must be taken to address growing misperceptions about the less harmful alternative which are no doubt being exacerbated by mainstream media scare stories and some mixed messaging in the public health sphere. This could be achieved through the introduction of national public education campaigns which arm adults with the best, science-backed information to help them quit.
He continued: “While the new data shows a decrease in current and ever youth vaping, no one under the age of 18 should be using vaping products. The UKVIA firmly believes that a fit-for-purpose vape licensing framework, which would generate upwards of £50 million in annual self-sustaining funding, is the best path forward to arming trading standards with the tools they need to bring the hammer down on rogue retailers and cut the supply of youth vaping off at the source.”
To read the full ASH adult findings click here, for the ASH youth data click here and for more on the first-of-its-kind vape licensing proposal click here.