Cebr research for the British Heart Foundation outlines the costs of smoking to businesses in ahead of No Smoking Day on March 12th.
But a government consultation may signal a crackdown. Even after Britain’s ban on indoor smoking came into force in 2007, the smell of cigarette smoke was never far away. It wafted across pub gardens and lingered outside workplaces. Today you are almost as likely to inhale the scent of blue razz lemonade or the “refreshing, mellow
Watermelon bubble gum, blueberry sour raspberry, gummy bear, ginger cola… no, not some of the sugary treats on the shelves of your childhood sweet shop, but just a few of the flavours of electronic-cigarette liquids being bought across the country every single day. Vaping, which is the inhaling of a vapour created by an e-cigarette,
GEEKBAR, a vape technology brand, is taking intelligent manufacturing to new heights by investing more than £120m into setting up a futuristic production facility, as part of its growth plans in the UK and to continue to be a leading vape brand of choice amongst British retailers. The two-year-project will see some of the most
As Brits set new year’s resolutions to go on diets or give up smoking a report has suggested that giving up traditional cigarettes for safer e-cigarettes such as vaping could boost the British economy by billions. A major report – Economic impact assessment of the vaping industry – by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) has
1 in 4 adults across Europe is insufficiently physically active, as are 4 out of 5 adolescents Cost to the European economy of “doing nothing” is over 80bn Euros per year – 5bn Euros more than the world spends on cancer drugs in a year Physical inactivity could become bigger risk to public health than
More than a quarter of the UK’s workforce (27%) – a staggering eight million people – have had a health problem that’s lasted more than a year, according to the new Health at Work Index created for the British Heart Foundation (BHF) by Cebr.