Hospitalisation numbers on the rise among young people in Vietnam due to e-cigarette poisoning


HANOI (Vietnam News/ANN): The number of hospitalisation cases due to electronic cigarette use has been increasing recently, with most of them involving young patients experiencing acute poisoning.

In the first six months of 2024, the poison control centre at Hanoi’s Bach Mai Hospital treated around 100 cases of e-cigarette poisoning.

On June 26, a 20-year-old man in Hanoi was rushed to Bach Mai Hospital after falling into a coma and suffering multiple organ damage due to using e-cigarettes.

Around 4am that day, his family heard strange noises and found him convulsing and unconscious. He was immediately taken to a nearby hospital and then transferred to the poison control centre in a comatose state with respiratory failure, multiple organ damage, brain and heart injuries, severe metabolic acidosis and kidney failure.

Tests on the e-cigarette he had used revealed the presence of synthetic cannabis. The young man had a history of using e-cigarettes for many years and had previously been hospitalised for e-cigarette poisoning in 2023.

Dr Nguyen Trung Nguyen, director of the poison control centre, said: “In the first six months of 2024 alone, the centre received approximately 100 cases of e-cigarette poisoning. In contrast, in the years 2022 and 2023, the centre received nearly 130 cases of hospitalisation for the same reason.

“Notably, many tests on patients’ e-cigarettes have returned positive results for drugs.”

A survey conducted by the poison control centre on e-cigarette samples used by 120 patients revealed that 16 of these samples tested positive for drugs, accounting for 13.3 per cent of them.

Toxicology tests on some specimens sent to a forensic institute detected drugs including ADB-Butinaca, THC and more.

According to Dr Nguyen, hospitalisation numbers due to the use of new tobacco products have been increasing recently. The widespread use of e-cigarettes is growing rapidly, with most cases involving young patients suffering from acute poisoning after using this type of cigarette.

Many people, especially teenagers, believe that e-cigarettes are harmless because they do not contain addictive nicotine.

“This is a misconception. E-cigarettes pose three major health risks: nicotine, artificial flavourings and drugs. Currently, the treatment costs for acute poisoning cases from drug-laced e-cigarettes range from over 10 million (S$530) to hundreds of millions of dong,” Dr Nguyen said.

“E-cigarettes, heated tobacco products and other new types of tobacco are harmful to health. They pave the way for abuse, addiction and exposure to synthetic chemicals, leading to numerous new diseases and health issues,” he warned.

“They also complicate the problems associated with traditional tobacco and drugs. Therefore, it is crucial not to evaluate, research or experiment with these products.”

Easily purchased online

Director of HealthBridge Canada in Vietnam Nguyen Thi An said that e-cigarette products could now be easily purchased through social media platforms like Facebook and e-commerce sites.

She said that she and her colleagues had tried ordering e-cigarettes themselves and when the package arrived, it was labelled as “anti-acne cosmetics” as a way for children to easily deceive their parents and teachers so as to be able to buy and use e-cigarettes.

“In our research, when we asked why students used e-cigarette products, 60 per cent said they started because their friends shared them.

“With a product costing only around 10,000 dong, students can easily share and use it in class as it is very affordable. They can even buy these new-generation tobacco products by skipping just one breakfast,” she said.

She also noted that these products were incredibly easy to purchase, convenient and accessible at any time, even being sold as toys at drink stalls right outside school gates.

“That’s why we always emphasise that if new tobacco products are only banned for children under 18, it is a failure. Products labelled as ‘milk’ are clearly targeting children. Moreover, e-cigarettes with appealing flavours are obviously aimed at children.”

From an economic perspective, she pointed out that allowing new tobacco products would not provide any economic benefit and, in the long run, negatively impact the health of future generations.

A survey showed that in 2019, the rate of new tobacco product use among 13- to 17-year-olds was 2.6 per cent. This rate increased to 3.5 per cent in 2022 and 7 per cent in 2023. Specifically, among 13- to 15-year-olds, the 2023 survey indicated a usage rate of up to 8 per cent.

According to reports from nearly 700 healthcare facilities, in 2023 alone, there were over 1,200 hospitalisations due to the use of e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products. The primary symptoms upon admission were allergies, poisoning and acute lung damage.

Experts have proposed an urgent ban on the import, production, distribution and sale of e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products, as well as banning advertising and promotion of these products in Vietnam.

In the long term, regulations from the resolution should be incorporated into the revised law on prevention and control of tobacco harm, they said. - Vietnam News/ANN

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