The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Do deaths show vapers should quit?

- Jacey Fortin, ©2019 The New York Times

Public health officials have long been wary of electronic cigarettes, also known as vape pens. But after an outbreak of serious lung illnesses this summer, those concerns became much more urgent. Federal health officials have announced that e-cigarettes — which people can use to vaporize and inhale liquids containing nicotine or THC, the high-inducing chemical in marijuana — could be behind at least 450 cases of severe lung disease in 33 states. The number of reported deaths reached six last week. On Wednesday, Trump administra­tion officials said they would move toward a ban on the sale of most flavored e-cigarettes. Public health officials are still trying to figure out why so many people have gotten sick and have recommende­d that people cut back on vaping in the meantime. Here’s what we know so far.

What is happening to people’s lungs?

The lung illness associated with vaping starts with symptoms that can include nausea, vomiting, fatigue, coughing and fever, escalating to shortness of breath that can become so extreme as to require hospitaliz­ation. Some patients have needed supplement­ary oxygen.

On lung scans, the illness looks like bacterial or viral pneumonia, but no infection has been found in testing.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released an official health advisory regarding the illness last month. It said people concerned about the disease should “consider refraining from using e-cigarette products.”

There are also broader concerns about the safety of e-cigarettes.

Although e-cigarettes do not contain the tar and other carcinogen­s of traditiona­l tobacco products, questions remain about the effects nicotine may have — especially on young people. Some experts say that nicotine may have harmful effects on a developing teenager’s brain, and some research has suggested that ingesting nicotine can affect the heart and arteries.

How did we get here?

Vaping gained popularity in recent years as an alternativ­e to tobacco cigarettes. According to a history compiled by the Consumer Advocates for Smoke Free Alternativ­es Associatio­n, modern e-cigarettes did not make their way to the United States until 2006.

By 2014, “vape” was the Oxford Word of the Year.

E-cigarette users can inhale nicotine without the deadly tar found in tobacco products, and many smokers use vape pens as a quitting aid.

But some U.S. public health experts, led by the CDC, have been suspicious of e-cigarettes. And regulation­s have largely banned vaping product companies from making broad claims about health and harm as compared with tobacco products — at least not without extensive data.

Skeptics of the devices have warned about the potential for unknown risks, as well as the dangers of opening a new

door to addiction for children and teenagers. Flavored products were considered especially worrisome, especially when it became clear that vaping products were

popular with minors.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion gained jurisdicti­on over e-cigarettes in 2016. Last year, amid rising reports of teen use, the agency began investigat­ing major manufactur­ers of vaping products that appeal to young people, focusing on Juul, the dominant brand of e-cigarette vape pods. Juul stopped selling most of its

popular flavored nicotine pods in stores last fall, but some look-alikes have since popped up.

Earlier this month, amid heightened concerns about the proliferat­ion of lung illnesses, the FDA said Juul had violated regulation­s by touting its vaping products as safer than traditiona­l tobacco cigarettes. In June, San Francisco became the first city to ban e-cigarettes, and other com

munities have similar measures in the works. Earlier this month, Michigan said it would ban all flavored e-cigarettes, becoming the first state to do so. Several state attorneys general have called for the federal government to ban flavored e-cigarettes, and bills to stop sales of flavored vaping products have been introduced in California and Massachuse­tts.

What don’t we know?

It’s still unclear what caused the illnesses this summer.

Some people who were sickened said they had vaped with oil containing THC, and some doctors reported that cannabinoi­d oils vaporized in cartridges may have caused some of the lung inflammati­on.

The FDA said that a significan­t subset of samples of vaping fluid used by sick patients included THC and also contained a compound called vitamin E acetate, which has been a subject of further investigat­ion.

But other people who got sick said they had used e-cigarettes containing only nicotine.

Public health officials have said it’s possible that some dangerous chemical or combinatio­n of chemicals has been recently introduced into the pipeline of vaping products, which would explain why these illnesses are happening now.

So for the time being, it is especially risky to use vaping products that may

have been tampered with or mixed, or were bought on the street instead of from a retailer.

And as health officials work to under

stand the sudden outbreak of lung illnesses, they have recommende­d that people take a break from vaping altogether.

 ?? JEENAH MOON / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Public health officials have recommende­d that people consider refraining from vaping while they investigat­e hundreds of cases of lung illness and six deaths linked to e-cigarettes. On Wednesday, Trump administra­tion officials said they would move toward a ban on the sale of most flavored e-cigarettes.
JEENAH MOON / NEW YORK TIMES Public health officials have recommende­d that people consider refraining from vaping while they investigat­e hundreds of cases of lung illness and six deaths linked to e-cigarettes. On Wednesday, Trump administra­tion officials said they would move toward a ban on the sale of most flavored e-cigarettes.

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