New University of Canterbury research has found vape stores are proliferating in Aotearoa New Zealand’s most deprived communities – with many also located near schools.
Large inequities in access to vaping products are highlighted in the investigation, with far more vape stores in New Zealand’s most deprived neighbourhoods compared to less deprived communities.
Published in the peer-reviewed academic journal Social Science & Medicine, the new study also finds almost 30 per cent of New Zealand’s vape stores are within 400 metres of a school and 71 per cent are within 800 metres.
“To be honest, I have been surprised by just how many vape stores are near schools and to see the magnitude of difference between numbers of vape stores in the most deprived and least deprived communities,” says lead author Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury public health expert Dr Matt Hobbs.
“We can also see that the number of these stores in the least deprived areas are hardly going up at all over time, whereas they are increasing rapidly in the most deprived areas that also tend to have a larger proportion of Māori, Pasifika and Asian residents.
“The gap between more affluent and more deprived areas is getting bigger over time.”
Discussions between Matt and Whānau Whanake sparked the research, he says.
“We were working on a project looking at air pollution impacts on health, but it was increasingly apparent that vaping and the rise of vaping among young people was important,” says Matt, Co-Director of the GeoHealth Laboratory in the Geospatial Research Institute at UC.
“We decided to take a closer look at how this has developed over time and where the vape stores are.”
The study was kickstarted with Health Research Council funding. Matt, with UC postdoctoral fellow Dr Lukas Marek at the Geospatial Research Institute, supervised UC student Isaac Waterman to help identify the prevalence and spatial distribution of vape stores nationwide.
“It is very rare for an undergraduate student to do something like this. He was funded for 12 weeks of research and did a phenomenal job,” Matt says.
Various sources – including the Specialist Vape Retailer register, the New Zealand Deprivation index, and census data – were combined to pinpoint vape store locations and to explore the connection with deprivation and youth vaping.
As well as the journal article, key findings are presented online through UC’s GeoHealth Laboratory.
Breaking Through the Cloud: Vaping in Aotearoa New Zealand provides interactive data that policymakers, schools, health organisations and community groups can access.
“People can zoom into their school or neighbourhood and see how many vape stores there are in the vicinity.”
New regulations aimed at limiting youth vaping were announced last August, including no new specialist vape shops within 300 metres of schools and marae.
Describing their findings as just one piece of a big jigsaw, Matt says there is much more research yet to be done.
“What we hope to do next is explore the link between exposure to vape products and the outcome of young people actually vaping.”
2 comments
More research?
Posted on 23-05-2024 12:22 | By morepork
No, save the money and ban it. There is more than enough evidence to show that it has done nothing to improve ANYBODY'S life (apart from some shady overseas interests) and it should never have been introduced to NZ.
Money Hungry
Posted on 23-05-2024 14:07 | By Yadick
I don't begrudge anyone a legal business but totally disagree with running a business unethically and preying on the vulnerable.
Most of society say vapes are harmless but for many decades we said and thought the same about cigarettes. In years to come are the results going to be the same for vapes or even worse. At the end of the day that crap has no place in our lungs and possibly even our mouth.
A lot, lot more research is required and until then they should be banned and then reviewed pending the outcome.
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