San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Teens keep vaping despite crackdowns on e-cigarettes

- By Christina Jewett

High school students resumed taking the annual National Youth Tobacco Survey in school this year and 14% of them reported using e-cigarettes, underscori­ng how an upstart industry is dodging regulators’ efforts to spare a generation from nicotine addiction.

The number shows a slight change from 11% last year, but researcher­s cautioned against drawing comparison­s to 2021’s survey, which was conducted differentl­y because it took place when many schools were closed during the pandemic. The latest results were released by the Centers for Disease Control

and Prevention.

Although the age-old force of peer pressure may still be encouragin­g use, the percentage of high school students who reported vaping in the past 30 days was still far lower than record-high levels reached in 2019 of nearly 28%.

Overall, the survey found that 2.5 million middle and high school students, or about 9%, used ecigarette­s in the past 30 days. That puts their overall rate of use several times higher than that of adults, estimated at about 3%.

The survey showed that 85% of adolescent e-cigarette users favored vapes in fruit, dessert and candy flavors. Some mentioned PuffBar, Vuse and Juul as their favorite brand among those on the survey’s list.

But many said their favored e-cigarette brand was not one of the 13 listed. That finding highlights how nimble the industry has been in stamping an array of brand names on vapes with flavors like strawberry ice cream and fresh vanilla that are largely made in China and shipped from warehouses to corner stores and into ecommerce.

Groups opposed to ecigarette­s and tobacco products were particular­ly troubled by a finding that reflected the highest frequency-of-use to date: Nearly half of the high school students who vape said they were doing so 20 to 30 days a month.

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