Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin joins multistate probe of JUUL Labs marketing

Focus is on claims about safety, nicotine content

- Mary Spicuzza

Wisconsin has joined a multistate investigat­ion of leading e-cigarette maker JUUL Labs, state Attorney Josh Kaul announced Tuesday.

The probe is focused on JUUL’s marketing and sales practices, including allegation­s that the company has targeted youth; nicotine content claims; and claims about the safety and effectiveness of its vaping product as a smoking cessation device.

“E-cigarette use has increased dramatical­ly among young people in Wisconsin and nationally, and we must act to reduce it,” Kaul said in a statement. “JUUL has been the driving force behind this increase, and we are working with a bipartisan group of AGs to investigat­e JUUL’s sales and marketing practices.”

In 2014, just under 8% of Wisconsin high school students were using e-cigarettes, but by 2018 that number had jumped to 20% or one out of every five students, state officials say.

Between 2014 and 2018, use by Wisconsin middle school students jumped 272%, state Department of Health Services statistics show.

A similar surge in youth vaping has occurred nationwide.

In recent months, federal and state officials have been investigat­ing a nationwide outbreak of lung illnesses linked to vaping. As of Feb. 4, 2,758 people have been hospitaliz­ed with vaping-linked lung illnesses across 50 states, the District of Columbia and two U.S. territorie­s, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Federal officials say 64 deaths have been confirmed.

Most of those lung illness cases have been linked to vaping products containing THC, the psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana, federal officials say. And vitamin E acetate, an ingredient frequently added to bootleg THC vaping products, has been found to be a “very strong culprit“in the outbreak of lung injuries, according to the CDC.

Children’s Wisconsin doctors helped uncover the nationwide outbreak after treating a series of teen patients this summer.

In July, Children’s Wisconsin physicians held a news conference announcing that eight Wisconsin teens had been hospitaliz­ed after vaping. The doctors warned they were seeing previously healthy teens with sudden symptoms such as extreme cough, trouble breathing, fatigue, weight loss, vomiting and diarrhea. They urged other medical providers nationwide who saw similar cases to report them.

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