Abstract

ABSTRACTE-cigarettes are a new and disruptive element in global health diplomacy (GHD) and policy-making. This is an ethnographic account of how e-cigarettes and other Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) were tackled at the 6th Conference of the Parties to the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. It demonstrates how uncertainty about ENDS and differences of opinion are currently so great that ‘agreeing to disagree’ as a consensus position and ‘strategic use of time’ were the principles that ensured effective GHD in this case. Observers representing accredited non-governmental organisations were active in briefing and lobbying country delegates not to spend too much time debating an issue for which insufficient evidence exists, and for which countries were unlikely to reach a consensus on a specific regulatory approach or universally applicable regulatory measures. Equally, the work of Costa Rica in preparing and re-negotiating the draft decision, and the work of the relevant Committee Chair in managing the discussion, contributed to effectively reining in lengthy statements from Parties and focusing on points of consensus. As well as summarising the debate itself and analysing the issues surrounding it, this account offers an example of GHD working effectively in a situation of epistemic uncertainty.

Highlights

  • Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) – a challenge for global health diplomacy and policy-makingFrom a Chinese patent issued in 2003, the marketing, sales and use of electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes have expanded rapidly around the world

  • We describe and analyse the way in which ENDS were handled in global health policy-making at the 6th Conference of the Parties (COP6) of the World Health Organization (WHO)’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)

  • Given the discord within the tobacco control community regarding the regulation of e-cigarettes, the FCA’s five-page briefing on ENDS was important

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Summary

Introduction

ENDS – a challenge for global health diplomacy and policy-making. From a Chinese patent issued in 2003, the marketing, sales and use of electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes have expanded rapidly around the world. Between 2009 and 2013, for example, sales in the US rose from $20 m to $1bn; the UK has followed a similar trajectory (Stimson, Thom, & Costall, 2014). Since the e-cigarette is but one of a category of products remarkable for their diversity of brands, types and nomenclature (Zhu et al, 2014), ‘Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems’ (ENDS) has become the preferred term in policy circles. ENDS commonly contain a liquid mixture of propylene glycol and/or vegetable glycerine, A. A battery-powered element heats the liquid to produce a vapour that is inhaled and exhaled

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