B.C. moves flavoured nicotine pouches behind pharmacy counters to protect youth
The pouches contain up to 4 milligrams of nicotine and are marketed as a smoking cessation aid
B.C. has ordered that flavoured nicotine pouches be moved behind pharmacy counters instead of being sold openly in an effort to prevent youth from becoming addicted.
The order, signed by Health Minister Adrian Dix, means buyers of the pouches will have to consult a pharmacist first.
"By limiting access to these products and ensuring they are dispensed by trained health-care professionals, our goal is to prevent their misuse, especially among young people for recreational purposes," said Dix.
Premier David Eby says the province is doing what it can to prevent children from coming into contact with the "hazardous" and "addictive" product while Health Canada works to address rules that allow the pouches to be sold in convenience stores and gas stations.
Eby said nicotine can cause changes in the brains of young people and that the government wants to prevent them from being exposed to the products, which experts say are designed to appeal to children.
Ottawa approved the pouches — produced by cigarette manufacturer Imperial Tobacco under the brand name Zonnic — as a product to help smokers quit.
Zonnic does not contain tobacco, and because the pouches contain less than four milligrams of nicotine each and are not inhaled, they do not fall under existing federal or provincial tobacco or vaping legislation.
In B.C., you must be 19 or older to purchase vape or tobacco products.
In November, federal health minister Mark Holland said regulators had been "duped" and vowed to close the loophole that allowed Zonnic to be sold openly.
"There are very serious questions about what the tobacco industry is doing here and what their intention is. And it would seem that their intention is to addict new young people to nicotine, which is disgusting," Holland said at the time.
Colette Lees, a substance-use liaison with the Surrey School District, said the allure of nicotine products with enticing flavours and marketed as harmless alternatives to smoking "have proven to be a huge challenge'' to youth who are often unaware of their addictive nature.
The Canadian Cancer Society applauded the move, noting that while youth smoking rates in B.C. are down, other methods of nicotine consumption are up significantly.
"With the introduction of flavoured nicotine pouches last year, youth once again can become addicted to these new tobacco industry products," it said in a statement.
Charles Aruliah, the society's advocacy manager in Vancouver, says the nicotine pouches were being placed in convenience stores next to products like candy bars that are easily accessible to youth.
"With the United States and Europe, where these products have been in market for quite a while ... we see that there has been significant use and uptake among youth," he told Amy Bell, guest host of CBC's On The Coast.
"Some countries are starting to look to ban the product entirely."
A statement from Imperial Tobacco Canada said the company was "extremely disappointed" by the province's decision, and that shifting sales away from convenience stores and gas stations makes it "more difficult for smokers to access a product that can help them quit smoking."
The Montreal-based company says it supports preventing children from buying nicotine products, but adds that Imperial has "gone above and beyond" to make sure they're only available after age verification and that the premier should reconsider the move.
With files from Canadian Press, Karin Larsen and On The Coast