Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Vaping attracts younger uses in US

Survey finds children as young as 12 have begun experiment­ing

- LISA RAPAPORT

THE proportion of e-cigarette users in the US who started vaping by age 14 has more than tripled in the past five years, a recent study suggests.

From just 8.8% in 2014, the share of vapers who had picked up their first e-cigarette at age 14 or earlier surged to 28.6% in 2018, according to researcher­s who analysed survey data from almost 27 000 youth.

“Vapers five years ago were starting at later ages than kids who were vaping last year,” said Rebecca Evans-Polce of the University of Michigan, lead author of a report in the American Journal of Public Health.

Parents need to “be aware that kids as young as 12, 13, 14 are starting vaping,” Evans-Polce said by email. “Conversati­ons with their children about vaping need to happen earlier than they may think.”

The National Youth Tobacco Survey is administer­ed annually in middle and high schools across the country. Evans-Polce and colleagues focused on responses from youth ages 16 to 17, to capture shifts over time in how often teens had tried vaping before they reached adolescenc­e.

Among teens who had tried vaping, 63% didn’t use e-cigarettes before age 16 in 2014. But by the end of the study period, only about 43% of teens who vaped had waited this long to start.

Over the same period, there were no meaningful changes in the ages at which youth tried traditiona­l cigarettes, cigars or smokeless tobacco.

The study wasn’t designed to determine why young people are trying vaping at younger ages.

“It may be a combinatio­n of factors including kids not seeing vaping as risky, the flavours that are particular­ly appealing to kids, and kids being influenced by their peers, particular­ly as the behaviour becomes more prevalent among teens,” Evans-Polce said.

Kids may also mistakenly believe that vaping is risk-free, even though e-cigarettes have been linked to respirator­y problems, Evans-Polce added.

Beyond the risk of breathing problems, teen vaping or other forms of nicotine exposure can harm brain developmen­t and increase the potential for addiction and challenges with cessation later in life, said Hongying Dai, a researcher at the University of Nebraska Medical Centre in Omaha, who wasn’t involved in the study.

“We need to raise the awareness of the harmfulnes­s of e-cigarette use among parents and the general public,” Dai said. “Parents should discuss with their children about the substances in their vaping, the harmfulnes­s of vaping, and the health risks related to vaping.”

Big tobacco companies, including Altria Group Inc, Lorillard Tobacco Co and Reynolds American Inc, are all developing e-cigarettes.

The battery-powered devices feature a heating element that turns liquid containing nicotine into a cloud of vapour that users inhale.

Even when e-liquids don’t contain nicotine, the lungs are still exposed to flavouring chemicals when the vapours are inhaled.

While many of the flavouring­s are considered safe to eat, some previous research suggests that inhaling vapour from these chemicals may damage the lungs, blood vessels and heart.

 ?? | REUTERS African News Agency (ANA) ?? The proportion of e-cigarette users has greatly increased, studies show.
| REUTERS African News Agency (ANA) The proportion of e-cigarette users has greatly increased, studies show.

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