Press Release – VAPO The largest Kiwi-owned vape company, VAPO, believes the Ministry of Healths proposal to ban sweeteners in e-liquids will cause catastrophic disruption for those Kiwis relying on them to successfully transition from smoking to much less harmful …
The largest Kiwi-owned vape company, VAPO, believes the Ministry of Health’s proposal to ban sweeteners in e-liquids will cause ‘catastrophic disruption’ for those Kiwis relying on them to successfully transition from smoking to much less harmful and less expensive vaping.
As well as mass migration back to cigarettes, VAPO fears the move will wipe out New Zealand’s local, independent vape industry and hundreds of jobs.
Business Scoop » Banning Sweeteners In Vapes Would Be catastrophic
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Banning Sweeteners In Vapes Would Be catastrophic
scoop.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scoop.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Gandalf the green fairy on medicinal cannabis, jail and helping the sick
5 Mar, 2021 07:00 PM
12 minutes to read
Gandalf happily identifies as a hippie - he was once the only vegan in Whāngārei, years before that was fashionable. Photos / Jason Hosking
Gandalf happily identifies as a hippie - he was once the only vegan in Whāngārei, years before that was fashionable. Photos / Jason Hosking
By: Russell Brown
Russell Brown travels to the Far North, where the green fairy lives. Somewhere in Northland, 10 kilometres along an unsealed road and another four or five up what is fondly referred to as a driveway ,
Southern District Health Board chief executive officer Chris Fleming said patients were being treated by the Canterbury District Health Board while active recruiting continued. This had led to increasing resources going towards managing patients in ICU and transferring them to Christchurch for surgery. “If there s ever been a time of a collective South Island service, we are living in it,” Fleming said. Chief medical officer Dr Nigel Millar said neurosurgery was a major skill shortage in New Zealand. The country had not trained its own neurosurgeons in the past 10 years, he said. Medical Council requirements for foreign surgeons were strict, Millar said, and many needed to complete time in bigger centres before they would be allowed to work in a regional hospital, adding another obstacle to the recruitment process.