Chicago Sun-Times

Let’s extinguish e-cigarette industry’s targeting of teens

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When millions of kids and teens are at risk of becoming nicotine addicts, the feds certainly ought to get tough.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion rightly took a hard line with the five largest makers of flavored e-cigarettes, giving them 60 days to come up with plans to curb underage use of the increasing­ly popular devices — or risk having them pulled from the market.

“The disturbing and accelerati­ng trajectory of use we’re seeing in youth and the resulting path to addiction must end,” FDA commission­er Scott Gottlieb said.

A deadline for action is sorely needed, given that more than 2 million middle school and high school students used flavored e-cigarettes last year. “Vaping,” as it’s called, is indeed an epidemic, as the FDA asserts.

Any manufactur­er that won’t outline concrete steps to keep its product out of the hands of kids has no business making a profit from those products. Especially given new evidence that vaping is a gateway to regular tobacco use.

A government-commission­ed study from earlier this year found that young people who use e-cigarettes are more likely to end up smoking regular cigarettes as they get older.

The FDA still says e-cigarettes can be a big help to adults who want to quit smoking, and that’s important. We favor any tool that helps people quit a potentiall­y deadly habit. And if any adult for any reason wants to head to the nearest vaping bar or chooses to use e-cigarettes, that’s his or her business.

Our concern is with protecting kids and teens.

E-cigarette manufactur­ers insist they’re doing their level best not to target young people. The problem is they also insist on selling e-cigarettes in “fun” flavors.

Or, as one 20-something woman blithely explained to us: “Everyone knows they’re for high school kids.”

E-cigarette manufactur­ers fight age limits on sales. (Gov. Bruce Rauner recently vetoed an Illinois bill that would have raised the age for purchasing tobacco and related products, including e-cigarettes, to 21.)

They oppose a ban on kid-friendly flavors, such as candy and bubble-gum.

They oppose making e-cigarettes available only by prescripti­on, even as they insist their only interest is in helping adult cigarette smokers quit.

We’re in agreement with the FDA — the Trump administra­tion’s FDA — on this one. America doesn’t need another generation of nicotine addicts.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? An e-cigarette smoker.
AP FILE PHOTO An e-cigarette smoker.

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