The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Reduce teen vaping, but don’t worsen public health

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Connecticu­t lawmakers are considerin­g a variety of bills to address the recent increases in teen vaping, including banning flavored vapor products. E-cigarettes have quickly become one of the most controvers­ial debates in public health because their significan­t public health benefits — as a replacemen­t for traditiona­l cigarettes — are being offset by concerns surroundin­g teen vaping.

On the federal level, the Food and Drug Administra­tion is trying to thread a needle. It wants to keep e-cigarettes available on the market to help adult smokers quit traditiona­l cigarettes. But there’s increasing pressure to keep these products out of the hands of kids.

Research from groups like the Royal College of Physicians finds e-cigarettes are substantia­lly safer than traditiona­l cigarettes. Though most e-cigarettes contain nicotine, that’s not what sends 480,000 Americans to an early grave with lung cancer and other diseases every year. Instead, it’s the smoke that comes from lighting tobacco on fire that is most harmful to humans. Detach nicotine from cigarettes and you give smokers the nicotine they desire without the smoke that may kill them. According to researcher­s at Georgetown University, “up to 6.6 million cigarette smokers will live substantia­lly longer if cigarette smoking is replaced by vaping over a 10-year period.”

“Old policies need to be supplement­ed with policies that encourage substituti­ng e-cigarettes for the far more deadly cigarettes,” said David Levy, Ph.D., professor of oncology at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehens­ive Cancer Center. “There would be tremendous health benefits including reduced disease disability to smokers, reduced pain and suffering, and reduced exposure to second-hand smoke.”

Unfortunat­ely, the potential health gains e-cigarettes could help deliver are being threatened by the uptick in youth vaping. To combat this worrying rise in teen vaping, Connecticu­t legislator­s are contemplat­ing a ban on all e-cigarette flavors that allegedly target kids. But such a ban would have a more significan­t impact on adults trying to quit smoking than preventing teens from vaping.

A 2017 study by researcher­s from the Yale School of Public Health published by the National Bureau of Economic found “a ban on flavored e-cigarettes would drive smokers to combustibl­e cigarettes, which have been found to be the more harmful way of getting nicotine.” The authors concluded that banning flavors “reduces the appeal of e-cigarettes to those who are seeking to quit (smoking); e-cigarettes have proven useful as a cessation device for

Unfortunat­ely, the potential health gains e-cigarettes could help deliver are being threatened by the uptick in youth vaping. To combat this worrying rise in teen vaping, Connecticu­t legislator­s are contemplat­ing a ban on all e-cigarette flavors that allegedly target kids

these individual­s, and we find that quitters have a preference for flavored e-cigarettes.”

Other things aimed at reducing smoking, like nicotine replacemen­t therapies, have been useful for some smokers but notoriousl­y ineffectiv­e for the vast majority of smokers who are trying to quit. E-cigarettes have been proven time and again to be effective at helping smokers quit. In January, The New England Journal of Medicine published a randomized control trial considered the gold standard in academic research concluding, “e-cigarettes were more effective for smoking cessation than nicotinere­placement therapy.”

Before legislator­s proceed on banning flavors, they should remember that the big picture trends on youth tobacco use in Connecticu­t are encouragin­g. Yes, from 2011 to 2017 the number of high school students using e-cigarettes rose from 2.4 percent to 14.7 percent, according to the Connecticu­t Youth Tobacco Survey. But, in 2011,the survey showed 14 percent of high schoolers were smoking cigarettes. By 2017, the number of high school students smoking cigarettes had plummeted to 3.5 percent.

Yes, the rise of youth vaping is troubling and measures should certainly be taken to require the e-cigarette industry to crack down on sales to minors. However, state lawmakers should also keep the overall public health picture in mind. Banning e-cigarette flavors would risk significan­tly reducing the important, proven health improvemen­ts e-cigarettes can deliver to smokers and society. Guy Bentley is director of consumer freedom at Reason Foundation, a nonprofit, libertaria­n think tank. He has testified before Congress on this issue and can be reached at guy.bentley@reason.org.

 ?? Melia Russell / San Francisco Chronicle ?? A person wearing a Juul backpack walks toward the e-cigarette maker’s headquarte­rs on Pier 70 along the San Francisco, Calif., waterfront in December.
Melia Russell / San Francisco Chronicle A person wearing a Juul backpack walks toward the e-cigarette maker’s headquarte­rs on Pier 70 along the San Francisco, Calif., waterfront in December.
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Where I STAND

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