The Sun (Malaysia)

Jury still out on vaping health effects

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VAPING, or smoking battery powered devices known as ecigarette­s, may encourage youths to start smoking, but may also help adults quit, said a US review of scientific research released last week.

The report, by the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine, is based on more than 800 peer-reviewed scientific studies on the health effects of electronic cigarettes.

It was compiled at the request of the US Congress, amid a growing internatio­nal debate over whether e-cigarettes are safe or harmful.

E-cigarettes, which have gained popularity in the last decade, are handheld devices that heat up a nicotine-containing liquid so users can inhale the vapours.

They contain “fewer numbers and lower levels of toxic substances than convention­al cigarettes”, said the report. But they are also addictive. The amount of nicotine they deliver can vary, but experience­d adult e-cigarette users tend to get “a comparable level of nicotine as convention­al cigarettes” – leading to “symptoms of dependence” in those who use them.

Reviewed evidence suggests that e-cigarettes are “likely to be far less harmful than tobacco products”, said David Eaton, chair of the committee that wrote the report.

“[But] in some circumstan­ces, such as their use by non-smoking adolescent­s and young adults, their adverse effects clearly warrant concern,” said Eaton, dean of the graduate school of the University of Washington, Seattle.

Young people are more likely than adults to use e-cigarettes, and the report found “substantia­l evidence” that vaping increases the risk of smoking convention­al cigarettes.

But when adult smokers use ecigarette­s to quit smoking, “they offer an opportunit­y to reduce smoking-related illness”, said Eaton.

The report found “conclusive evidence” that substituti­ng ecigarette­s for convention­al cigarettes “reduces users’ exposure to many toxicants and carcinogen­s present in convention­al cigarettes”.

Switching from regular cigarettes to e-cigarettes also “results in reduced short-term adverse health outcomes systems”.

But their long-term remain unknown.

The report found “no available evidence whether or not e-cigarette use” is associated with cancer in people.

Animal studies, however, suggest that long-term e-cigarette use “could increase the risk of cancer”.

Researcher­s also declined to categorise e-cigarettes as a positive or negative influence on public health.

“More and better research on e-cigarettes’ short- and long-term effects on health, and on their relationsh­ip to convention­al smoking is needed to answer that question with clarity,” said the report. – AFP-Relaxnews in several organ effects

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