Houston Chronicle

School COVID closures cut teen vaping

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — Teen vaping plummeted this year as many students were forced to learn from home during the pandemic, according to a government report released Thursday.

U.S. health officials urged caution in interpreti­ng the numbers, which were collected using an online questionna­ire for the first time. But outside experts said the big decrease in electronic cigarettes use is likely real and makes sense given that young people often vape socially.

“They found a dramatic drop from last year and it’s hard to imagine that doesn’t represent a real decrease in use among high school and middle school students,” said Dr. Nancy Rigotti of Harvard University, who was not involved in the research.

In the national survey, 11 percent of high school students and less than 3 percent of middle school students said they were recent users of e-cigarettes and other vaping products, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

That’s a roughly 40 percent drop from last year, when nearly 20 percent of high school students and 5 percent of middle schoolers said they’d recently vaped.

If this year’s numbers hold up, it would be the second big drop in a row, from a peak of 28 percent for high schoolers in 2019.

Even before the pandemic, a number of new restrictio­ns were curtailing underage use of e-cigarettes. In late 2019, a new federal law raised the purchase age for all tobacco and vaping products from 18 to 21. Shortly afterward, the FDA banned nearly all flavors from small, cartridge-based ecigarette­s, which first sparked the teen vaping craze.

Also, some kids may have been scared off by an outbreak of vaping-related illnesses and deaths; most were tied to a filler in black market vaping liquids that contained THC, the chemical in marijuana that makes users feel high.

For months, tobacco experts have speculated about the potential effect of school closures on vaping, given that most teens vape with their friends and get ecigarette­s from their peers.

Rigotti said the decline will have to be confirmed by other surveys due out later this year.

Previously, the survey was always conducted in classrooms. This year’s was done online from January through May to accommodat­e students both at home and in school. Anti-tobacco advocates point out that students who completed the survey in school reported higher rates of vaping — 16 percent compared to 8 percent for students learning at home.

Overall, government officials estimate about 2 million U.S. teens and adolescent­s are vaping, a number they say is far too high. “E-cigarette use among youth remains a serious public health concern,” said CDC specialist Dr. Karen Hacker, in a statement.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? A national survey finds that 11 percent of high school students and less than 3 percent of middle school students recently used vaping products, a roughly 40 percent drop from last year.
New York Times file photo A national survey finds that 11 percent of high school students and less than 3 percent of middle school students recently used vaping products, a roughly 40 percent drop from last year.

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