The Palm Beach Post

FDA: Kids are vaping in ‘epidemic’ numbers

Agency threatens to ban popular flavored products.

- By Laurie McGinley

Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Scott Gottlieb has escalated his efforts to stop an “epidemic” of teenage vaping, announcing Wednesday a massive enforcemen­t action against retailers for allegedly selling e-cigarettes to minors and warning manufactur­ers of a potential ban of flavored e-cigarette liquids.

Officials said the move against more than 1,300 retailers was the largest coordinate­d enforcemen­t action in the agency’s history. The threatened ban, if carried out, would significan­tly upend the fast-growing industry.

The latest data, not yet published, show a 75 percent increase in e-cigarette use among high school students this year compared to 2017. The FDA declined to publicly release the numbers, but people familiar with them said they were preliminar­y data from the National Youth Tobacco Survey, on which the agency and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention collaborat­e.

In a speech to FDA employees, Gottlieb said that rapid spike in teen use, emerging sales trends and concerns among parents and teachers convinced him that underage use of e-cigarettes has become a full-blown crisis that must be forcefully addressed. “The disturbing and accelerati­ng trajectory of use we’re seeing in youth, and the resulting path to addiction, must end,” he said.

In its enforcemen­t action, the FDA recently sent almost 1,200 letters to brick-andmortar stores and online retailers warning them that they could face penalties for allegedly selling e-cigarettes to people under 18. The agency also imposed fines — ranging from $279 to $11,182 — on another 130 establishm­ents for repeated offenses.

Even more significan­t, notices sent Wednesday morning demand that five leading e-cigarette manufactur­ers, including San Francisco-based Juul Labs, submit plans within 60 days detailing ways to sharply curb sales to underage consumers. If the blueprints don’t promise to “substantia­lly reverse” the youth-use trend, Gottlieb said, the agency will consider steps that could lead to the temporary or permanent removal of flavored products from the market.

Such a step would be a major blow to the e-cigarette companies — Juul, Vuse, Blu, Logic and MarkTen —which often feature cream and fruit flavorings in their products. Many public-health groups say such flavors entice young people to try the devices. The companies insist that the flavors are critical to helping adult smokers switch from convention­al cigarettes.

Gottlieb’s action drew immediate praise from a major tobacco-control organizati­on, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

“This is potentiall­y the most important step FDA has taken to curtail youth use of e-cigarettes,” said the group’s president, Matthew Myers. But this “fundamenta­l turning point” will produce results only if the agency follows through by requiring all manufactur­ers to immediatel­y undergo pre-market review at the FDA, he added.

 ?? BILL O’LEARY / WASHINGTON POST ?? Juul Labs is one of five e-cigarette manufactur­ers that must submit plans to federal regulators for curbing sales to underage consumers.
BILL O’LEARY / WASHINGTON POST Juul Labs is one of five e-cigarette manufactur­ers that must submit plans to federal regulators for curbing sales to underage consumers.

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