Privacy statement: Your privacy is very important to Us. Our company promises not to disclose your personal information to any external company with out your explicit permission.
A South Korean vaping industry organization is suing two government agencies for spreading misinformation about nicotine vaping that it says caused financial distress for many of its members. The group wants the government to correct the record.
The Korea Electronic Cigarette Association (KECA), which represents about 4,000 vape product retailers, alleges that the Republic of Korea’s Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) and Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) damaged the reputation of small vape businesses and caused them great financial harm.
The Oct. 23, 2019 press release urged Koreans to avoid e-liquid-based vaping products, based on supposed concerns over the outbreak of U.S. vaping-related lung injuries called “EVALI” by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
By the time the Korean press release was issued, most American experts were already convinced “EVALI” was caused by a cannabis oil diluent called vitamin E acetate, although the CDC didn’t admit it until November (and never fully abandoned the claim that some “EVALI” cases may have been caused by nicotine vaping products). No case of “EVALI” has ever been tied to a nicotine vaping product.
KECA says that, at the time of the government press release, “there was only one suspected case of lung damage in Korea, and even the suspected case came from a person who smoked tobacco,” according to Korea Biomedical Review. (“EVALI” cases were almost exclusively found in cannabis oil vapers in the United States.)
In fact, says KECA, the government itself has previously admitted that vaping is safer than smoking. “According to the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS) test results in 2017,” said KECA, “very low levels of harmful ingredients were detected in liquid e-cigarettes compared to tobacco. Notably, tar and carbon monoxide were not detected at all, and formaldehyde was only at 1/20 level and acetaldehyde at 1/500 level compared to regular cigarettes.”
Yet, despite the MFDS’ conclusions, the MOHW created an ad campaign that suggested smoking and vaping are equally harmful. KECA says the “false impression” created by the health agency’s press release and advertisements caused “enormous economic and psychological damage” to vape retailers.
A survey of American vaping retailers found that more vape shop owners blamed U.S. news coverage of the lung injury outbreak for their huge sales losses in 2020 than blamed the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 80 percent of stores reported losses that year, with an average sales decline of 18 percent.
September 24, 2023
February 07, 2023
April 07, 2023
April 07, 2023
Mail an Lieferanten
September 24, 2023
February 07, 2023
April 07, 2023
April 07, 2023
Privacy statement: Your privacy is very important to Us. Our company promises not to disclose your personal information to any external company with out your explicit permission.
Fill in more information so that we can get in touch with you faster
Privacy statement: Your privacy is very important to Us. Our company promises not to disclose your personal information to any external company with out your explicit permission.