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Children so addicted to vapes they can't sleep without them, says doctor

As a ban on the sale of disposable vapes comes into force on Sunday, a doctor who set up the first-ever clinic to help children stop vaping has said she has seen patients so addicted they couldn't sleep through the night without them.

Professor Rachel Isba established the clinic at Alder Hey Hospital in Liverpool in January and has now seen several patients as young as 11 years old who are nicotine dependent. "Some of the young people vape before they get out of bed.

They are sleeping with them under their pillow," she told Sky News. "I'm hearing stories of some children waking up at three o'clock in the morning, thinking they can't sleep, thinking the vape will help them get back to sleep.

Whereas, actually, that's the complete opposite of how nicotine works." Prof Isba said most of her patients use disposable vapes, and while some young people may use the chance to give up, others will simply move to refillable devices after the ban. "To me, vaping feels quite a lot like the beginning of smoking.

I'm not surprised, but disappointed on behalf of the children that history has repeated itself." A government ban on single-use vapes comes into effect this weekend, prohibiting the sale of disposable vaping products across the UK, both online and in-store, whether or not they contain nicotine. Read more: Why stockpiling vapes could be dangerous The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said usage among young vapers remained too high, and the ban would "put an end to their alarming rise in school playgrounds and the avalanche of rubbish flooding the nation's streets".

Circular economy minister Mary Creagh said: "For too long, single-use vapes have blighted our streets as litter and hooked our children on nicotine. That ends today.

The government calls time on these nasty devices." At nearby Shrewsbury House Youth Club in Everton, a group of 11 and 12-year-old girls said vape addiction is already rife among their friends. Yasmin Dumbell said: "Every day we go out, and at least someone has a vape.

I know people who started in year five. It's constantly in their hand." Her friend Una Quayle said metal detectors were installed at her school to try to stop pupils bringing in vapes, and they are having special assemblies about the dangers of the devices.

But, she said, students "find ways to get around the scanners though - they hide them in their shorts and go to the bathroom and do it". The girls said the ban on disposables is unlikely to make a difference for their friends who are already addicted.

According to Una, they'll "find a way to get nicotine into their system". As well as trying to address the rise in young people vaping, the government hopes banning single-use vapes will reduce some of the environmental impact the devices have.

Read more from Sky News:Disposable vape ban explainedWhy vapes are environmentally badSchool support worker struck off over vapes boasts Although all vapes can be recycled, only a tiny proportion are - with around eight million a week ending up in the bin or on the floor. Pulled apart by hand Even those that are recycled have to be pulled apart by hand, as there is currently no way to automate the process.

Scott Butler, executive director of Material Focus, a recycling non-profit group, said vapes were "some of the most environmentally wasteful, damaging, dangerous consumer products ever sold". His organisation worries that with new, legal models being designed to almost exactly mimic disposables in look and feel - and being sold for a similar price - people will just keep throwing them away.

He said the behaviour "is too ingrained. The general public have been told 'vapes are disposable'.

They've even been marketed this way. But they never were disposable"..

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