UK study endorses ‘game-changing’ e-cigarettes for first time

A woman exhales vapour from an e-cigarette outside the offices of British e-cigarette manufacturer Totally Wicked in BlackburnBy Angus Berwick LONDON (Reuters) – Health officials in Britain have for the first time endorsed e-cigarettes, saying they are 95 percent safer than tobacco equivalents and even suggesting doctors should be able to prescribe the "game-changing" devices to smokers trying to quit. E-cigarettes, which allow users to inhale nicotine-laced vapour but contain no tobacco, have surged in popularity in recent years but health bodies have so far been wary of advocating them as a safer alternative. Governments from California to India have tried to regulate their use more strictly, many fearing they are a gateway to tobacco smoking among teenagers, and the World Health Organization has also called for curbs on the devices.

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