Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FDA said to plan e-cigarette restrictio­ns

- LAURIE MCGINLEY

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administra­tion, alarmed by a huge increase in the smoking of e-cigarettes among minors, is expected to impose severe restrictio­ns on the sale of most e-cigarettes products throughout the United States — actions that likely will have a significan­t impact on an industry that has grown exponentia­lly in recent years with little government oversight.

As soon as next week, FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb is expected to announce a ban on the sale of flavored e-cigarettes — the majority of vaping products sold — in tens of thousands of convenienc­e stores and gas stations across the country, according to senior agency officials. According to its officials, the agency also will impose such rules as age-verificati­on requiremen­ts for online sales.

The FDA moves are being spurred by preliminar­y government data showing e-cigarette use rose 77 percent among highschool­ers and nearly 50 percent among middle-schoolers in 2018. That means 3.5 million children were using the devices in early 2018, up 1 million from 2017.

Gottlieb, who once served on the board of a North Carolina ve-cigarette company, was at one time viewed as an ally of the e-cigarette industry, and delayed some critical e-cigarette rules shortly after becoming commission­er in 2017. But he also has said his first priority is protecting kids from tobaccorel­ated disease.

“We now have evidence that a new generation is being addicted to nicotine, and we can’t tolerate that,” he said, referring to the vaping data in an interview before he made final decisions on e-cigarette policy.

The only exception to the ban on flavored products in convenienc­e stores involves menthol e-cigarette products. The FDA will continue to permit that flavor to be sold because menthol is permitted in regular cigarettes as well, and the agency doesn’t want to give traditiona­l cigarettes an advantage over e-cigarettes in the retail setting.

Gottlieb’s actions are focused on a specific kind of product that dominates the market — e-cigarettes that use prepackage­d flavor cartridges, or pods. That includes the wildly popular products by Juul Labs Inc. The restrictio­ns don’t apply to the “open-tank” systems available in e-cigarette shops.

Research indicates many ecigarette users are likely to get addicted to nicotine and some will likely end up on regular cigarettes, a product that kills half its long-term users. Moreover, the long-term health consequenc­es of using the devices is not known.

At the same time, devotees and “harm reduction” advocates have said e-cigarettes represent a powerful tool in helping adult smokers to quit more dangerous cigarettes. They have warned that making it harder for adults to buy e-cigarettes — or depriving them of flavored products — will be detrimenta­l.

“We have to be really careful not to overreact to the youth problem,” said David Abrams, professor of social and behavioral sciences at New York University.

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