The Coroner found the child died in June, 2018, after ingesting a highly concentrated form of liquid nicotine, which is commonly imported from overseas.
ATHRA chairman conjoint associate professor Colin Mendelsohn said the case demonstrated the urgent need for the legalisation and regulation of liquid vaping products in Australia.
“This tragedy could have been avoided if Australia had a proper regulatory system in place that imposed strict standards on product packaging and liquid nicotine concentrations,” Prof Mendelsohn said.
“The Coroner said in his report ‘if the product is banned in Australia, how can we in this country enforce safeguards… of a product manufactured overseas?’.
“Unfortunately, he stopped short of recommending legislation and regulation, instead proposing a public awareness campaign about liquid nicotine.
“This is disappointing, because a public awareness campaign is unlikely to have prevented a tragedy like this,” he said.
“The only thing that will prevent this from happening again is proper regulation.”
Because of the ban on nicotine e-liquid and lack of regulation, Australian vapers are unable to legally purchase safer pre-mixed, ready-to-vape nicotine liquids locally.
Many users instead import a highly concentrated form of nicotine liquid to mix their own.
These solutions are much cheaper and require smaller volumes of liquid to be imported – however, they are much more toxic and are unregulated.
Although unintentional, the flaws in Australia’s regulations have now resulted in tragedy.
Prof Mendelsohn said ATHRA recommended pre-mixed, ready-to-vape nicotine e-liquid in low concentrations (up to 24mg/ml) be made legally available for sale in Australia.
He said “these safer nicotine preparations” would be sold only in child-proof bottles with appropriate labelling.
“This would eliminate the need to import dangerous, highly concentrated nicotine liquid in unsafe bottles.
“There would be no need for home mixing which involved risks from accidental overdose, spillage and mixing errors. Strict rules around bottling, labelling, safety warnings and child-proof containers should also be enforced for additional protection.
“The tragic death of this 18-month-old child was due to a combination of human error as well as flawed legislation. “Legalising and regulating low concentrations of pre-mixed nicotine e-liquid would support smokers who wish to switch to vaping and reduce the risk of further episodes of child poisoning,” Prof Mendelsohn concluded.