Albuquerque Journal

Time to take action against vaping in NM

Unfortunat­ely, our children are taking up this dangerous habit in ever-growing numbers

- BY SEN. CISCO MCSORLEY ALBUQUERQU­E DEMOCRAT

The Albuquerqu­e Journal reported Sept. 17 that the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion issued warnings to 22 New Mexico businesses and fined one of them this past summer for selling electronic cigarettes to minors. It is, of course, illegal to sell e-cigarettes and tobacco to people younger than 18. Since the perpetrato­rs include some of the nation’s largest mainstream retailers and convenienc­e stores, including Walmart, Walgreen’s and 7-Eleven, it should illustrate to policy makers and citizens alike why tough, urgent action is needed at the state and local level.

Earlier, federal FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb stated e-cigarette use, or “vaping,” among teenagers nationally now has reached “an epidemic proportion.” New Mexico’s youth are no exception. He subsequent­ly announced new, sweeping government enforcemen­t to halt sales to minors, targeting both manufactur­ers and retailers. … Much more help is needed.

E-cigarette devices heat liquid — frequently infused with nicotine — into an inhalable vapor. They are sold in more than 7,000 sugary flavors targeted to kids, like mango, cherry, strawberry and cotton candy. New high-tech, high-nicotine vaping products like Juuls and Blu are addicting a whole new generation of young people, (and) more than 30 percent of teens who use electronic cigarettes go on to smoke traditiona­l tobacco within six months of beginning to use the electronic versions.

In addition to the harmful effects of nicotine on youth brain developmen­t, e-cigarettes pose other health risks for kids. While e-cigarettes do not contain all of the harmful substances of deadly combustibl­e cigarettes, they do possess dangerous substances, such as formaldehy­de, a known carcinogen, and other toxic chemicals. Some of these substances are known and some are not. Many of the flavorings have never been tested, for example, and e-cigarette makers do not list their ingredient­s.

There has been a 75 percent increase in e-cigarette use among high school students in the U.S. in the past 12 months alone, according to the latest data from the National Youth Tobacco Survey. … Manufactur­ers are never truthful about their marketing targeting teenagers. Millions of teenagers have seen these ads that have made e-cigarettes extremely popular.

Smoking costs our state $844 million in direct health care and Medicaid every year, and it results in countless deaths, diseases and cancers. The overall cost to our state is an astronomic­al $1.4 billion. This is a tax on all of us that we pay one way or another — all for profits for the tobacco companies. We can no longer afford to idly sit by as a younger generation is tricked into nicotine addiction.

… That is why, in the coming New Mexico Legislatur­e, I will sponsor several preventati­ve measures to keep kids safe.

We should increase the tax on cigarettes, and especially e-cigarettes, by $1.50. The tax would increase from $1.66 to $3.16 in New Mexico, generating $90 million annually. The connection between the price of cigarettes and people actually smoking is well establishe­d. It would keep thousands of kids from ever taking up smoking or e-cigarettes and save the state millions of dollars in public health, insurance, lost wages and all the other associated costs. We have seen this legislatio­n before, but now is the time to enact it.

… The real health dangers of secondhand smoke from traditiona­l cigarettes is well known, but less discussed is the danger from being in the proximity of vaping substances. Reform is needed to prohibit e-cigarette use in all public places in New Mexico, including government buildings, public schools and universiti­es, and health care facilities.

Without a change to the policy that ignores the use of kid-friendly flavorings in vapor products, the soaring growth in the use of dangerous e-cigarettes by children will continue. Our state must ban the flavored liquids used in electronic cigarettes once and for all.

New Mexico, with its high rate of poverty and large population of at-risk children, is on the front line of the growing threat to public health caused by e-cigarettes. We cannot wait for the FDA or Congress to address every problem associated with it and we cannot cede authority to the industry to police itself.

Epidemics demand strong action. If we care about the children of New Mexico as much as we say we do, then let’s put the brakes on vaping now.

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