In what is almost certainly a preview of policies that will be urged at the fall meeting of the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), the WHO has issued a report on “new and emerging” tobacco and nicotine product use that encourages countries to adopt harsh anti-vaping and anti-harm reduction positions.
There is literally nothing new in the report. It’s the usual set of complaints and lies about vaping, and a reupping of the evergreen list of excuses for the WHO’s own feeble anti-smoking progress. Worldwide tobacco control efforts would be going swimmingly, the WHO says, except for those darn tobacco and “related” companies’ attempts to reverse the progress by encouraging uptake of non-combustible nicotine products like vapes (which, as usual, are called ENDS).
Vaping products contain nicotine, they explain, which may affect adolescent brain development. They’re marketed in thousands of flavors, which “can increase the palatability of the product and help them be targeted specifically at children and young adults.”
“Eighty-four countries still have no bans or regulations to address ENDS, leaving them particularly vulnerable to the activities of the tobacco and related industries,” says the report. Adolescents who vape, according to the WHO, are “more than twice as likely to later use conventional cigarettes.” (That has certainly not borne out with real live teenagers in the United States, where school-age smoking has fallen dramatically as teen vaping increased, and high schoolers smoked more in the only U.S. city with a total vape ban.)
The report was funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the foundation started by American billionaire and former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg. Not coincidentally, Bloomberg has been appointed the “WHO Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable Diseases and Injuries”—a largely honorary title granted in recognition of the money he spends on tobacco control and other health policy efforts.
Bloomberg Philanthropies has spent billions funding the spread of prohibitionist dogma in countries around the world. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), Bloomberg-funded groups like the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and The Union have urged outright bans on e-cigarettes, claiming those countries are incapable of properly implementing reasonable regulations.
In theory, the WHO and FCTC exist to create and promote health strategies demanded by member states. In reality, WHO tobacco policy goals and plans come from the top down. Bloomberg-sponsored Tobacco-Free Kids and its allies essentially run the WHO’s tobacco control operations as a subsidiary. It is those groups that will plot the recommendations the FCTC will present to member countries at November’s ninth Conference of the Parties (COP9) in the Netherlands.
With the promise of endless Bloomberg dollars, the WHO and FCTC aren’t even fearful of losing the support—and maybe funding—of the FCTC Secretariat’s largest donor: the government of the United Kingdom. A report issued by a UK Parliamentary study group earlier this year encouraged the British government to consider “dramatically scaling back” its funding of the WHO and FCTC if the international organizations don’t reconsider their opposition to vaping and tobacco harm reduction as an anti-smoking strategy.
But the WHO isn’t budging. “Nicotine is highly addictive. Electronic nicotine delivery systems are harmful, and must be better regulated,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a statement today.