Las Vegas Review-Journal

FDA’S ‘Peal Cost’ anti-vapine campaien tareets youne people

- By Mari A. Schaefer

The videos show parasiticl­ike creatures tunneling across blemishfre­e faces, under scalps and into the lungs of young, unsuspecti­ng teens. A still image shows a teen’s mouth replaced with a Usb-like port.

They are meant to be shocking and they are — in a science fiction kind of way.

The images are part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion’s $60 million anti-vaping ad campaign, called “The Real Cost.” The campaign is aimed at

VAPING

the 10.7 million kids, ages 12 to 17, who have used or are willing to try e-cigarettes.

Vaping hasn’t left that kind of highly visible damage — the practice does not lead users to contract parasites. But the FDA says vaping does put kids at risk for addiction and other serious health problems, and the startling images draw attention to those words.

Nicotine, a compound in the vaping products, can rewire the developing adolescent brain to crave more of the product. The ads also show that e-cigarettes can contain dangerous chemicals such as acrolein, a chemical that can cause irreversib­le lung damage; formaldehy­de, a cancer-causing chemical; and toxic metal particles, such as chromium, lead and nickel, which can be inhaled, the FDA stated.

“E-cigarettes have become the most ubiquitous — and dangerous — trend among youth that we believe has reached epidemic proportion­s,” Commission­er Scott Gottlieb said. The presence of the fruit and candy flavors is one component that makes the product more attractive to kids, he said.

The agency plans to run the ads where kids will see them — online and in about 10,000 high school bathrooms nationwide. The ads will run on Youtube, Spotify, Pandora, Facebook and Instagram as well as the FDA’S website.

“No youth should be using any

nicotine-containing product,” Gottlieb said.

The ad campaign is the latest effort by the agency to halt the use of e-cigarettes.

It recently issued a demand that manufactur­ers provide plans within 60 days showing how they will keep their products out of the hands of minors. The five top-selling national brands — Vuse, Blu, Juul, Markten XL and Logic — make up 97 percent of the U.S. market for e-cigarettes.

This summer, the FDA issued 1,300 warning letters and fines to retailers — both traditiona­l and online — that illegally sold the nicotine-delivering gadgets to minors.

In 2017, more than 2 million middle and high school students were found to have been using e-cigarettes, according to a National Youth Tobacco Survey.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that nearly one in 11 U.S. middle

and high school students in 2016 reported using cannabis while vaping. That translates to about 2 million youths.

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