Las Vegas Review-Journal

Health officials raise alarm over vaping

Students even bring it into classes undetected

- By Collin Binkley The Associated Press

BOSTON — Sneaking a cigarette in the school bathroom? How quaint. Today’s teens have taken to vaping, an alternativ­e to smoking that’s so discreet they can do it without even leaving the classroom.

Health and education officials across the country are raising alarms over wide underage use of e-cigarettes and other vaping products.

The devices heat liquid into an inhalable vapor that’s sold in sugary flavors like mango and mint — and often with the addictive drug nicotine. They’re marketed to smokers as a safer alternativ­e to traditiona­l cigarettes, but officials say they’re making their way to teens with surprising ease.

A new wave of smaller vapes has swept through schools in recent months, officials say, replacing bulkier e-cigarettes from the past.

It’s now common in some schools to find students crowded into bathrooms to vape, or performing vape tricks in class.

“We’ve seen significan­t increases across the student body,” said Robert Keuther, principal at Marshfield

High School on the south shore of Massachuse­tts. “This is not something specific to one group of kids. It’s across all of my grades, nine to 12. It’s all students.”

Vaping devices are notoriousl­y difficult to detect for schools, often leaving behind only a quick puff of vapor and a light fruity scent. Students get away with it in bathrooms, halls and even classrooms, where some say they exhale the vapor into their shirts.

The rise of teen vaping has sparked concern among parents, politician­s and federal health authoritie­s, who on Tuesday announced a nationwide crackdown on underage sales of e-cigarettes.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion issued a warning to retail stores as part of its new operation against illegal sales. It also requested marketing and design documents from the maker of the Juul, a popular vape product that is shaped like a flash drive.

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