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Health Canada to enlist social media influencers for vaping awareness campaign

OTTAWA — Wanted: social media celebrities to warn teens of the risks of vaping.

Health Canada is looking for a contractor to develop, implement and report on a national vaping awareness program, including finding social media influencers that teens might be willing to listen to.

“Canadians look for information from a variety of sources, and youth in particular are more likely to engage with other influencers beyond government, or health professionals,” said a spokesperson from Health Canada.

 

One of the goals of the contractor is to find social media trend-setters with a lot of followers and influence who can encourage youth and young adults to attend events and spread Health Canada’s message online about the risks associated with vaping.

The search for a contractor comes just one month after the federal government passed a new law formally legalizing and regulating vaping, or e-cigarettes, and which also aims to stamp out any lifestyle aspects of vaping that might appeal to teens.

The Tobacco and Vaping Products Act prohibits the sale of vape products to minors, bans flavours aimed at young people and prohibits marketing that features testimonials, health claims or lifestyle themes.

It also allows the legal manufacture, import and sale of vaping products, both with and without nicotine.

Finding online celebrities won’t be the contractor’s only job. In fact, he or she will be responsible for developing a strategy and plan for a national marketing events program and for developing, implementing and managing the awareness campaign.

Health Canada considers vaping products to be harmful, although not as harmful as smoking cigarettes. It is concerned about the particular appeal of vaping to teens and its potential to promote tobacco use. And the department says there is clear evidence that exposure to nicotine adversely affects cognitive function in the developing brains of adolescents.

The Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey from 2016-17 shows 23 per cent of students in grades 7-12 have tried e-cigarettes — up from 20 per cent in 2014-15. Ten per cent of students, or 206,000 had used an e-cigarette in the previous 30 days, an increase from 6 per cent in 2014-15.

Of those who had used e-cigarettes recently, 17 per cent were also cigarette smokers, 12 per cent were former smokers, 35 per cent were experimental smokers or puffers, and 36 per cent never smoked a cigarette, not even a puff.

The national vaping campaign will target youth aged 15-18 and non-smoking young adults aged 19-24 to help them understand the risks and to help parents and teachers with resources they need to have conversations about the health risks of vaping products.

Health Canada says the contract is expected to start in the fall.

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