Albany Times Union

Law needs to catch up with teen vaping epidemic

-

The following is from a Seattle Times editorial:

Just as public-health officials were starting to celebrate their success at keeping cigarettes out of the hands of teens, a new threat to their health rushed in: electronic cigarettes. Even teens who never considered picking up a cigarette are using e-cigarettes, or vaping pens, because they wrongly believe they are not harmful. They are.

E-cigarettes arguably may be safer than traditiona­l cigarettes — the scientific jury still is debating that point — but the batteryope­rated device that vaporizes a liquid nicotine solution is a dumb choice for youth. The nicotine is highly addictive, and research has connected vaping with heart, lung and brain problems. Solvents and other ingredient­s in the liquid are also toxic and may be carcinogen­ic. And more alarming, scientists are certain e-cigarette use leads to regular smoking for many teens: 12- to 17-year-olds who vape are twice as likely to become regular smokers within a year, according to a study in JAMA Pediatrics.

Teen use of e-cigarettes has reached “epidemic proportion,” U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Scott Gottlieb announced last week. The FDA is warning retailers and manufactur­ers if they can’t keep their products out of the hands of underage users, the agency may ban flavored products used in the trendy handheld devices.

It’s obvious that flavored e-cigarettes are marketed directly at teens, with bright color packaging and flavors that mimic candy, fruit and alcoholic drinks.

State officials can help by raising the age to 21 to buy these products — along with tobacco — or consider banning e-cigarettes outright, as San Francisco has done.

Even though state and federal laws already ban vaping-product sales to anyone under age 18, young people have no problem buying e-cigarette brands. Of 3.6 million U.S. middle- and highschool students who say they are tobacco users, 2.1 million use e-cigarettes, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The FDA has already banned candy- and fruit-flavored cigarettes. Flavored electronic cigarettes need to go as well. Too many children are at risk because of nicotine peddlers who care more about profits than children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States