Toronto Star

American teenagers say they don’t vape, they ‘Juul’

Health officials worry that’s led to confusion when pollsters quiz teens on nicotine use

- ANNA EDNEY

A language gap is making it harder for U.S. health officials to measure a teen-vaping epidemic.

For some young people who use the popular vaping device sold by Juul Labs Inc., “juuling” is a verb in its own right. Antitobacc­o groups and health officials worry that has led to confusion when pollsters go out into the field to quiz teens on their nicotine habits for an annual government survey that plays an important role in shaping tobacco policies. This year for the first time, the poll will specifical­ly mention Juul as an example of an e-cigarette.

Caleb Mintz, 17, first tried Juul when he was 15, after he saw his friend holding the sleek device.

“Hearing the word Juul instead of vape makes it sound a lot different,” he said. “It did not look like your typical vape. Giving it a fancy name made it seem like it didn’t have anything harmful in it.”

Mintz didn’t stick with it. He said he saw friends become so addicted that they’d turn to cigarettes for a nicotine fix if their Juul wasn’t in reach. Mintz now considers himself a youth advocate and travels the country calling for e-cigarette curbs.

The National Youth Tobacco Survey is usually compiled each March through May. The updated survey language is expected to capture kids who think juuling isn’t the same as using another e-cigarette.

“We suspect that we may see an increase as a result of the more precise language,” said Brian King, deputy director for research translatio­n in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Office of Smoking and Health.

“Most kids are aware of Juul now that it has become a household name, but it has also become so ingrained in the culture that some of them may not know it’s an e-cigarette.”

The CDC conducts the survey with the Food and Drug Administra­tion. Results typically aren’t released until late in the year, but preliminar­y figures may become public sooner.

Youth vaping surged to what government officials last year called epidemic levels. E-cigarette use among high school students rose 78 per cent compared with 2017, to more than 3 million students. Last year, the U.S. survey named brands including Imperial Brands Plc’s Blu and Altria Group Inc.’s MarkTen, but not Juul.

Juul Labs made deft use of social media to popularize its device until pressure from the FDA led the San Franciscob­ased company to shut down its U.S. Facebook and Instagram accounts in November. The company has said it supports efforts to raise the minimum age to buy tobacco products to 21.

Juul doesn’t prominentl­y refer to its device as an e-cigarette in advertisin­g but does use the word vapour, including in its Twitter handle. While its Instagram account no longer is active, it did often use the hashtag #juulvapor in posts.

Juul spokespers­on Lindsay Andrews said the company makes it clear that its products are intended for adults and all carry warning labels about nicotine and its addictive properties.

“We follow FDA in calling our products e-cigarettes, electronic nicotine delivery systems or vapour across our various forms of communicat­ions,” Andrews said. “Most kids are aware of Juul now that it has become a household name.”

As “juuling ” entered the youth lexicon, the Truth Initiative raised concerns that some users may not know what they’re inhaling. The antitobacc­o group found 63 per cent of Juul users ages 15 to 24 surveyed in November 2018 didn’t know the product contains nicotine, which is considered harmful to developing brains. Some users who knew of the nicotine in Juul pods weren’t aware of the potential downsides.

“I’m someone who’s always been fixated with health,” said Sophia, 22, who runs track for a university. She didn’t want be identified by her full name so her coach and parents wouldn’t know about her Juul habit. Sophia goes through one mint-flavored pod a day, which has the same amount of nicotine as a pack of cigarettes. She says it hasn’t affected her running.

“It’s seen as something that’s addictive, but I don’t know what I’m addicted to,” Sophia said. “It’s been marketed as something not damaging to our health at all.” E-cigarettes have been hawked as smoking-cessation aids and the FDA took a go-slow approach on regulating them. However, the surge in underage use and the increasing evidence of the devices’ ill effects forced a shift.

“Everybody, including me, previously thought that an ecigarette is kind of like a cigarette with less junk in it,” said Stanton Glantz, a tobacco researcher at the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco. But, he said, research is beginning to show that e-cigarettes are “probably about as bad as cigarettes.” The FDA began to push back last year on the stylized, onlinecent­ric marketing by Juul and other companies with messages aimed at preventing youth e-cigarette use. Ads that ran on platforms such as Hulu, Facebook and Spotify warned kids that nicotine could reprogram their brains.

In May, an FDA ad push, part of a larger $60-million (U.S.) prevention campaign, will hit major television networks, said former FDA commission­er Scott Gottlieb. He said that while the agency had been wary of discouragi­ng adults from using e-cigarettes to help them quit smoking, the youth-use trend “has gotten so worrisome that we’re going to have to now make that tradeoff.”

“Giving it a fancy name made it seem like it didn’t have anything harmful in it.” CALEB MINTZ YOUTH ADVOCATE

 ?? JOSHUA BRIGHT THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Juul has become wildly popular with teenagers and now accounts for more than 70 per cent of e-cigarette sales in the U.S.
JOSHUA BRIGHT THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Juul has become wildly popular with teenagers and now accounts for more than 70 per cent of e-cigarette sales in the U.S.

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