Santa Fe New Mexican

Smoke from e-cigarettes poses threat to youth

Aerosol considered harmful because it can contain possible toxic substances

- By Jia Naqvi

One in 4 middle school and high school students report that they have been exposed to secondhand smoke from e-cigarettes in the past 30 days, according to a new study by researcher­s at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The finding translates to about 6.5 million youths exposed. Some of the students had smoked e-cigarettes themselves during that time, but 4.4 million were not users. More than 1 million were exposed to secondhand smoke only from e-cigarettes, the study concluded.

The U.S. surgeon general reported in December that exposure to secondhand aerosol from electronic cigarettes is harmful because of the possible toxic substances, such as nicotine and heavy metals, they contain. Nicotine exposure can be particular­ly dangerous because it can affect adolescent brain developmen­t.

“We know that secondhand e-cigarette aerosol is not harmless, and it’s critical to protect our nation’s youth from this preventabl­e health risk,” said Brian King, deputy director for research translatio­n in CDC’s Office on Smoking and Health and a co-author of the new study. It was published in JAMA Pediatrics.

E-cigarette use among young people is a growing concern in the United States, with the surgeon general finding a 900 percent increase among high school students from 2011-15. That jump makes e-cigarettes the most commonly used form of tobacco among children and adolescent­s in the United States, surpassing cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco and other convention­al products.

Flavor is one of the most common reasons young people give for using e-cigarettes, according to the surgeon general’s report. But some chemicals used for e-cigarette flavoring can be harmful to health, King said.

“One example is diacetyl, which is known to produce the buttery flavor in popcorn, and studies have linked inhalation of diacetyl to a severe respirator­y illness,” King said. The ailment is commonly known as popcorn lung syndrome.

The CDC study drew on data from the 2015 National Youth Tobacco Survey. It found that secondhand exposure to e-cigarette aerosol was greater for girls (nearly 27 percent) than boys (22 percent). Fifteen percent of black students reported being exposed, compared with 27 percent of white students.

Youth who used e-cigarettes or convention­al tobacco products are most likely to be exposed to secondhand smoke because of the company they often keep.

To protect children from exposure to secondhand smoke from smoked tobacco products and aerosol from e-cigarettes, states and communitie­s can consider modernizin­g smoke-free air policies to include e-cigarettes, he said.

“These policies can address the use of such products in indoor environmen­ts, and there has been considerab­le momentum across the country in the past few years,” he said.

Eight states and 500 communitie­s cover e-cigarette aerosol in their smokefree policies, he said.

To decrease all forms of tobacco product use among young people, King recommende­d “access restrictio­ns that prohibit youth who are less than a specified age from purchasing e-cigarettes, as well as educationa­l campaigns that warn about the risks of e-cigarette use and secondhand aerosol exposure among youth.”

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