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School Principals Face Up To $400 Fines Over Student Vaping

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Photo courtesy of VN Express

Vietnamese school principals could face fines of up to VND10 million (approximately US$400) if students are caught vaping on school premises. This measure is part of Decree 371, a new enforcement framework by the Ministry of Health set to take effect on December 31, 2025, aiming to address the rising trend of e-cigarette use among youths.

The decree allows penalties of VND5-10 million ($191-383) for school authorities who fail to prevent students from using e-cigarettes or heated tobacco products. Students caught using these products face fines of VND3-5 million. Confiscated e-cigarettes will be destroyed. This regulation is the first in Vietnam to assign legal responsibility for student vaping directly to school leaders.

The initiative aims to combat a worrying increase in youth vaping. Data shows e-cigarette usage among 13-17-year-olds surged from 2.6% in 2019 to 8.1% in 2023. Additionally, over 1,200 incidents of vaping-related poisoning were reported nationwide in 2023. The National Assembly responded by voting in November 2024 to ban production, sale, import, and use of all e-cigarettes starting in 2025.

Initial impacts indicate the crackdown is effective. Reports from the Ministry of Public Security note a significant drop in e-cigarette-related issues in 2025, including narcotic-laced product cases. Hanoi's Bach Mai Hospital also recorded a reduction in e-cigarette poisoning cases, dropping from five to six cases per month to only one or two.

Looking forward, the enforcement of Decree 371 is hoped to further reduce youth vaping rates. Authorities remain vigilant, with potential criminal charges for large-scale illegal activities involving e-cigarettes. The measures place Vietnam among over 40 countries with stringent e-cigarette regulations, highlighting a global trend toward strict anti-vaping policies, reported VN Express.

Key Takeaways

  • Vietnam fines principals up to VND10 million for student vaping.

  • E-cigarette use among teenagers rose significantly from 2019 to 2023.

  • Initial reports show a decrease in vaping-related incidents in 2025.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from VN Express 2026-01-28

 

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