Vaping’s popularity soaring among teens
Makers of devices say products intended for adults.
The proportion of U.S. high school seniors who are vaping tobacco products nearly doubled in the past year, according to a new study.
The proportion of U.S. high school seniors who are vaping tobacco products nearly doubled in the past year, with more than 1 in 5 now saying they have vaped to get a hit of nicotine in the past 30 days, according to a new study.
The prevalence of nicotine vaping nearly doubled among 10th-graders as well, with nearly 1 in 6 using the electronic devices, researchers reported Monday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The findings suggest that the total number of high school students using tobacco surged by 1.3 million between 2017 and 2018. “This increase was driven solely by nicotine vaping,” the researchers wrote.
T he f i gures are based on a nationwide survey of eighth-, 10th- and 12th-grad- ers who participated in the Monitoring the Future study, which has tracked teen use of tobacco, alcohol, illicit drugs and other substances every year since 1975.
In all that time, the researchers who conduct the survey have never seen a drug’s popularity explode the way vaping did in the past year.
“The absolute increases in the prevalence of nicotine vaping among 12th-graders and 10th-graders are the larg- est ever recorded by Monitoring the Future in the 44 years that it has continu- ously tracked dozens of substances,” wrote a team led by Richard Miech, who leads the study at the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research.
When electronic cigarettes first took hold among U.S. teens nearly a decade ago, public health experts fretted that the slick devices would lure a new generation of kids into tobacco use.
The new report vindicates their fears.
Makers of vaping devices say their pr o ducts are intended for use by adults, particularly smokers who would like to cut back on regular cigarettes by switch- ing to a less-toxic alternative.
Juul, the company that now dominates the market, says its mission is to create “a world where fewer peo- ple use cigarettes, and where people who smoke cigarettes have the tools to reduce or eliminate their consump- tion entirely, should they so desire.”
Unlike traditional ciga- rettes, which burn tobacco, e-cigarettes use a battery to heat a liquid that is inhaled in an aerosol form. That liq- uid usually contains nicotine along with a mixture of chemicals and flavorings. Juul’s starter pack includes “pods” with flavors like mango, mint and crème.
O th er e-liquid flavors seemed to be squarely aimed at kids, with packages that resembled frosted cookies and sour candies.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration ordered online retailers to stop sell- ing such products in Sep- tember as part of a broad initiative to reduce teen vaping. At the time, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said vaping had produced an “epidemic of nicotine addiction” among Amer- ica’s youth, with a prevalence that was “simply not tolerable.”
T he Monitoring t he Future researchers agreed that stronger action was needed to keep vaping devices beyond the reach of minors. Regulators will need to pay close attention to the fast-changing market and be ready to modify their policies if necessary, they said.
Miech applauded the FDA’s recent focus on kidfriendly flavors of vaping liquids. He also praised the agency for paying particular attention to Juul; the company’s devices have become so popular among middle and high school students that “juuling” is now synonymous with vaping.
The sharp increase in teen vaping was revealed in surveys completed by a nation- ally representative group of 13,850 students. The eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders com- pleted their questionnaires at school during a normal class period.