Las Vegas Review-Journal

Health officials sound alarm over vaping

- By Matthew Perrone The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — U.S. health officials are sounding the alarm about teenage use of e-cigarettes, calling the problem an “epidemic” and ordering manufactur­ers to reverse the trend or risk having their flavored vaping products pulled from the market.

The warning from the Food and Drug Administra­tion on Wednesday cited recent data pointing to a sharp rise in underage use of the devices, including Juul, Vuse and others.

It marks a shift in the agency’s tone on e-cigarettes. Since 2017,

FDA commission­er Scott Gottlieb has discussed e-cigarettes as a potential tool to ween adult smokers off cigarettes, although that benefit hasn’t been proved.

But Gottlieb said in an address at FDA headquarte­rs that he failed to predict the current “epidemic of addiction” among youth, mainly driven by flavored products.

“The disturbing and accelerati­ng trajectory of use we’re seeing in youth and the resulting path to addiction must end,” Gottlieb told agency staffers and reporters.

The FDA said it remains committed to exploring e-cigarettes as a less-harmful alternativ­e for adult smokers, but Gottlieb added “that work can’t come at the expense of kids.”

E-cigarettes are vapor-emitting devices that have grown into a multi-billion dollar industry in the U.S. despite little research on their long-term effects. They’re generally considered a less dangerous alternativ­e to regular cigarettes. But health officials have warned nicotine in e-cigarettes is harmful to developing brains.

Health advocates have worried about the popularity of vaping products among kids and the potential impact on smoking rates in the future. A government-commission­ed report in January found “substantia­l evidence” that young people who use e-cigarettes are more likely to try cigarettes.

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