Los Angeles Times

Vapers resort to a familiar addiction

Feeling worse off, some are returning to cigarettes in a risky bid to lower their nicotine intake.

- By Ana B. Ibarra Ibarra is a correspond­ent for Kaiser Health News, an editoriall­y independen­t publicatio­n of the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Lucas McClain started smoking cigarettes in high school but switched to vaping after he heard e-cigarettes were a safer alternativ­e.

His vape of choice became Juul, the king of electronic cigarettes — which comes with a king-size nicotine hit.

Now 21, McClain wants to quit so badly that he’s turning back to the problem he fled in the first place: good old-fashioned cigarettes.

“Juul made my nicotine addiction a lot worse,” the Arlington, Va., resident said. “When I didn’t have it for more than two hours, I’d get very anxious.”

Even though McClain knows the dangers of cigarettes — lung cancer runs in his family — he thinks it might be easier to kick cigarettes than his Juul. Plus, his mom keeps warning him about the mysterious vaping-related illnesses that have sickened hundreds across the country. So last month, McClain bought his first pack of cigarettes in years. Then he tweeted about it.

“Bought a juul to quit smoking cigarettes,” he wrote, “now I’m smoking cigarettes to quit the juul.” He ended with this hashtag: #circleofli­fe.

One Juul pod, which provides about 200 puffs, contains as much nicotine as a pack of cigarettes. On stressful days, McClain could finish a pod in three hours — and as he and others figure out just how potent these and other e-cigarettes are, many want out.

Some are turning back to combustibl­e cigarettes — or taking them up for the first time — in a dangerous bid to lower their nicotine intake and ultimately get off their vapes.

“Isn’t it ironic that to quit juul I bought cigarettes,” says one Twitter user. Another points out that it’s “strange” that she used the device to quit smoking cigarettes but is now “far more addicted to my Juul than I ever was to cigs.” “It sucks,” she said. It isn’t a complete surprise that some young people are “going back to the product they were trying to quit in the first place,” said Pamela Ling, a professor of medicine at UC San Francisco who studies tobacco and its marketing.

But it is worrisome because cigarettes contain chemicals that are dangerous to their health, she said.

Vaping may not be safe either. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is investigat­ing at least 380 cases of lung disease in 36 states — mostly among young people — possibly linked to vaping nicotine and marijuana. Six people have died. California is looking into 70 potential cases.

The back-to-smoke trend f lies in the face of the e-cig industry’s most insistent PR pitch: Vaping helps people quit smoking cigarettes. In fact, San Francisco-based Juul Labs, which commands 75% of the e-cig market, says in its mission statement that the company aims to eliminate cigarettes by giving adult smokers “the tools to reduce or eliminate their consumptio­n entirely.”

In an emailed statement, Juul didn’t directly address the decision by some of its users to revert to cigarettes but again clung to the refrain that its products were “designed to help adult smokers switch from combustibl­e cigarettes to an alternativ­e nicotine delivery system.”

Ted Kwong, a Juul spokesman, said Juul was not designed to get people off nicotine or to treat nicotine dependence.

For those who criticize Juul’s high nicotine content, Kwong notes that pods come in two strengths — 5% and 3% nicotine concentrat­ions — letting users customize their “switching journey.”

Last week, the Food and Drug Administra­tion reprimande­d Juul for promoting its products as being safer than cigarettes without FDA permission. It gave Juul 15 business days to respond.

Vaping has become big business, with the global market projected to hit $48 billion by 2023.

Smoke or vapor, cigarette makers win either way. Altria, which sells Marlboro and other tobacco brands in the U.S., invested nearly $13 billion in Juul for a 35% stake last year. Altria has proposed reuniting with Philip Morris Internatio­nal, a unit it sold off in 2008.

Even though the industry says vaping is intended for adults, Juul and other vaping pens took off among young people about two years ago when teens began taking the devices to school and teachers mistook them for flash drives. Students took hits in campus bathrooms and halls, and even in class when teachers weren’t looking.

The e-liquids inhaled from the devices contain nicotine and come in thousands of fruity flavors that appeal to kids.

On Monday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a crackdown on illegal and counterfei­t vaping products. He plans a $20million public awareness campaign about the dangers of vaping.

Michigan this month became the first state to ban sales of flavored e-cigarettes in an attempt to end teen vaping.

In June, the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s banned the sale of all e-cigarettes, beginning in early 2020. Juul is fighting back with a November ballot measure, Propositio­n C, backed by millions of its own dollars.

Many former smokers attest that vaping was the only thing that helped them quit cigarettes, but the science is mixed. Some studies have shown that many vapers continue to smoke cigarettes.

The FDA has approved seven treatments for smoking cessation, including patches, gums and lozenges. Vapes are not among them, said Dr. Elisa Tong, an associate professor of medicine at UC Davis.

Tong said vapers might be using more nicotine than they realize. She understand­s why some choose to go back to cigarettes, but she doesn’t recommend it.

“What they’re doing is trying to taper down superhigh levels of nicotine,” she said. “Unfortunat­ely, manufactur­ers don’t have a manual on how to quit their devices.”

Dr. Amanda Graham, senior vice president of innovation­s at the Truth Initiative, an anti-tobacco advocacy group, said she was seeing “desperatio­n and misguided approaches” from teens and young adults trying to free themselves from nicotine.

“Young people are fumbling in the dark with what seems logical,” Graham said. “But there is no safe level of cigarette smoking.”

Early this year, Graham’s group launched a digital program to help teens and young adults quit their vaping devices. Since then, 41,000 people ages 13 to 24 have enrolled in “This Is Quitting,” which sends them tips and support via text messages.

Chris Gatus of Whittier switched from traditiona­l cigarettes to Juul because he thought the device would help him quit smoking, he said. But because his Juul is always glued to his palm, he found himself using it everywhere and all the time.

“I’ve sort of forgotten what it’s like not to be on nicotine,” said Gatus, 21.

He switched back to cigarettes this year after noticing his growing addiction, but that only resulted in his using both. Now he’s trying different vaping pens, looking for something less harsh than the Juul or cigarettes, he said.

This month, Ryan Hasson of New York City threw out his Juul after experienci­ng strong chest pains and labored breathing when exercising — and after hearing about the growing number of vape-related illnesses. He had never felt such strong symptoms when he smoked old-fashioned cigarettes, he said.

“I don’t plan on ever smoking again, but if I had to choose, I would much rather buy cigarettes over a Juul,” said Hasson, 25.

The same is true of his friends, he said.

“I think a lot of people are quitting completely or going back to cigarettes,” he said. “They’re waking up to the reality that maybe this isn’t as safe as we once thought.”

 ?? Lynne Shallcross Kaiser Health News ?? LUCAS McCLAIN, 21, of Arlington, Va., says he thought e-cigarettes were safer than the combustibl­e ones, but Juul “made my nicotine addiction a lot worse.”
Lynne Shallcross Kaiser Health News LUCAS McCLAIN, 21, of Arlington, Va., says he thought e-cigarettes were safer than the combustibl­e ones, but Juul “made my nicotine addiction a lot worse.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States