Deccan Chronicle

City smokers puff on e-cigarettes

■ Doctors say e-cigarettes not completely safe

- SUDHEER GOUTHAM | DC

The sale of e-cigarettes is on the rise as more than five national companies of e-cigarettes, based in the city, are hardsellin­g the product by advertised the health benefits of these alternativ­es to cigarettes.

Each e-cigarette refill is priced anywhere between `3,000-5,000 while there are also ‘use and throw’ e-cigarettes that cost around `300.

“They are cleaner and healthier,” said, Mr Praveen Dasari, adding, “There is no staining and after-smell as compared to a regular cigarette; I have stopped smoking normal cigarettes completely.”

Concerned about the health of their loved ones, girlfriend­s, spouses, children are gifting these e-cigarettes to their boyfriends, partners and parents.

A young man, who is a doctor in the city, said, “I was gifted the e-cigarette by my girlfriend. Lot of CO2 that is inhaled by smoking regular cigarettes is not there in these e-cigarettes. That basically means I would not get cancer. And I intend to reduce the nico- tine liquid used in e-cigarettes over a period of time.”

He adds, “I also suggested e-cigarettes to my fellow doctor colleagues and friends who smoke. We also communicat­e over WhatsApp groups to suggest it to other friends who smoke.”

NRI Mr S. Anand Mohan, who is based in the USA, has gifted his father in Hyderabad e-cigarettes from the US. “I have often tried to get rid of his (father’s) addiction. So finally I presented him an ecigarette hoping to limit the damage.”

E-cigarettes manufacutr­ing companies in city say the sales have gone up in the last five years due to increasing awareness. However, medical experts opine that the e-cigarettes are not completely safe. “Ecigarette­s are basically designed to reduce the damage caused by regular cigarettes. The liquid used in it, which contains nicotine, is an addiction-causing agent. How-ever, cobalt, thorium and other heavy metals found in tar are not present in e-cigarettes,” said Dr C. Vijay Kumar, pulmonolog­ist, Yashoda Hospital.

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