The Columbus Dispatch

FDA may restrict e-cigarettes, ban menthol smokes

- By Sheila Kaplan and Jan Hoffman

Stopping short of its threatened ban on flavored e-cigarettes, the Food and Drug Administra­tion said Thursday that it would allow stores to continue selling the products, but only from closed-off areas that are inaccessib­le to minors.

At the same time, the agency moved to outlaw two traditiona­l tobacco products that disproport­ionately harm African-Americans: menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars.

The proposed menthol ban would be the most aggressive action the FDA has taken against the tobacco industry in nearly a decade, and it is notable given the Trump administra­tion’s business-friendly approach to regulatory issues.

If it clears the usual federal regulatory hurdles, a process which could take at least two years, the menthol ban could make a significan­t dent in cigarette sales. Menthol cigarettes account for about 35 percent of cigarette sales in the United States.

The three measures have a common target: the myriad flavors used to entice young people to vape and smoke. In restrictin­g flavored e-cigarettes, the FDA is trying to curb the rapid escalation of youth vaping. Some 3.6 million people under 18 reported using e-cigarettes, the agency said.

“Almost all adult smokers started smoking when they were kids,” Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the agency’s commission­er, said in a statement. “Today, we significan­tly advance our efforts to combat youth access and appeal with proposals that firmly and directly address the core of the epidemic: flavors.”

Gottlieb urged manufactur­ers to police themselves. The mere threat of a ban, which Gottlieb suggested two months ago, led e-cigarette makers in recent days to announce plans of their own that go beyond what the FDA laid out Thursday.

Juul Labs, by far the largest e-cigarette seller, announced Tuesday it would suspend store sales of its flavored pods, except for mint, menthol and tobacco, and shut down its social media promotions. And it said it would toughen its online age-verificati­on requiremen­ts.

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