The Jerusalem Post

Almost 1 in 20 US adults now use e-cigarettes

- • By LISA RAPAPORT

Roughly 10.8 million American adults are currently using e-cigarettes and more than half of them are under 35 years old, a US study suggests.

One in three e-cigarette users are vaping daily, researcher­s report in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

“Electronic cigarette use is also closely associated with other high-risk behaviors,” said senior study author Dr. Michael Blaha, director of clinical research for the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease in Baltimore. “The most common pattern of use in the US is dual use, i.e. current use of both traditiona­l cigarettes and electronic cigarettes.”

Twenty-somethings, smokers of traditiona­l cigarettes, unemployed adults, and people who identify as lesbian, bisexual, gay, and transgende­r (LGBT) are more likely than other individual­s to use e-cigarettes, the study also found.

“It is becoming clear that specific vulnerable groups are at highest risk of adopting electronic cigarettes,” Blaha said by email.

Big tobacco companies, including Altria Group Inc, Lorillard Tobacco Co and Reynolds American Inc, are all developing e-cigarettes. The battery-powered devices feature a glowing tip and a heating element that turns liquid nicotine and other flavorings into a cloud of vapor that users inhale.

E-cigarettes containing nicotine can be addictive like traditiona­l cigarettes. Even without nicotine, some research suggests that flavorings and other ingredient­s in e-liquids used for vaping could be linked to serious breathing problems.

In Israel, the Health Ministry last month banned popular Juul electronic cigarettes because they contain almost three times the recommende­d limit of nicotine. ANOTHER OPEN question is whether e-cigarettes might help some people cut back on smoking traditiona­l cigarettes or quit altogether and the study doesn’t offer a clear answer.

Overall, 1.4% of people in the study who never smoked traditiona­l cigarettes used e-cigarettes, as did 7.6% of ex-smokers and 14.4% of current smokers.

Men vaped more often than women; 5.9% of men reported current e-cigarette use compared with 3.7% of women.

Vaping was even more common among sexual minorities: 7% of lesbian and gay people were current e-cigarette users, as were 9% of bisexual adults and 8.7% of transgende­r individual­s.

People with chronic medical problems like heart disease, cancer, asthma and breathing disorders were also more likely to vape than individual­s without these common health issues.

A limitation, however, is that all of the data was self-reported and not verified by medical records. Researcher­s also didn’t know the type of e-cigarette devices people used or the liquids they vaped, which might influence health outcomes associated with vaping.

One advantage of the study is that researcher­s had responses from nearly 467,000 adults, making it possible to examine trends for subgroups like LGBTQ individual­s in a way that wouldn’t be possible with a smaller survey.

“We know that most e-cigarette users are smokers of convention­al cigarettes and that LGBTQ adults are more likely to smoke convention­al cigarettes, so I am not surprised that the prevalence of e-cigarette use is higher among LGBTQ individual­s,” said Dr. Nancy Rigotti, director of the Tobacco Research and Treatment Center at Massachuse­tts General Hospital and a professor at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

“Current smokers and recent quitters are the groups in which e-cig use is highest,” Rigotti, author of an accompanyi­ng editorial, said by email.

“Why LGBTQ adults are more likely to smoke cigarettes is a complex question, but these individual­s have a higher prevalence of other substance use disorders and mental health (diagnoses),” Rigotti added. “Tobacco use is high in adults with these conditions and this no doubt contribute­s to the higher level of tobacco use in LGBT individual­s.” (Reuters)

Jerusalem Post Staff contribute­d to this report.

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