The Columbus Dispatch

Youth smoking dip stalls; vaping to blame?

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK — Cigarette smoking rates have stopped falling among U.S. kids, and health officials believe youth vaping is responsibl­e.

For decades, the percentage of high school and middle school students who smoked cigarettes had been declining fairly steadily. For the past three years, it has flattened, according to new numbers released Monday.

There may be several reasons, but a recent boom in vaping is the most likely explanatio­n, said Brian King of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We were making progress, and now you have the introducti­on of a product that is heavily popular among youth that has completely erased that progress,” King said.

The CDC findings come from a national survey conducted last spring of more than 20,000 middle and high school students. It asked if they had used any tobacco products in the previous month.

Experts attribute the vaping increase to the popularity of newer versions of e-cigarettes, like those by Juul Labs Inc. of San Francisco. The products resemble computer flash drives, can be recharged in USB ports and can be used discreetly — including in school bathrooms and even in classrooms.

According to the new CDC data, about 8 percent of high schoolers said they had recently smoked cigarettes in 2018, and about 2 percent of middle schoolers did. Those findings were about the same seen in surveys in 2016 and 2017.

It also found that about 2 in 5 high school students who used a vaping or tobacco product used more than one kind, and that the most common combinatio­n was e-cigarettes and cigarettes. Also, about 28 percent of high school e-cigarette users said they vaped 20 or more days in the previous month — nearly a 40 percent jump.

E-cigarettes are generally considered better than cigarettes for adults who are addicted to nicotine. But health officials fear electronic cigarettes could lead kids to switch to traditiona­l cigarettes.

“I think the writing is on the wall,” with research suggesting e-cigarettes are becoming a gateway to cigarettes, said Megan Roberts, an Ohio State University researcher.

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