The Denver Post

Why we need more than flavor bans and lawsuits

- By Franklin Payne Franklin Payne is a public policy student at the University of North Carolina and a former teen health educator at Alice Aycock Poe Health Center in Raleigh, N.C.

It’s 10 am. I’m sitting in the back of a large lecture room in the University of North Carolina’s Hamilton Hall, surrounded by 150 other freshmen as the professor fiddles with his notes to get ready to cover the week’s topic. Throughout the lecture, I can’t help but see students bend over to discreetly exhale a thick, white cloud of tropical-smelling vapor.

It doesn’t seem to me like the actions of a high school rebel trying to impress peers but instead seems like a shameful addiction the students feel the need to hide.

My generation is a reflection of the results of policy inaction surroundin­g the vaping industry. We were drawn in by the intentiona­l marketing of these sleek vaping devices spewing clouds that smelled reminiscen­t of childhood candies and have since been plagued with the shaky hands and anxious minds of nicotine withdrawal.

Although there have been great strides in holding these large companies accountabl­e through recent lawsuits against companies such as e-cigarette giant Juul, implementa­tion of federal flavor bans, and expanding public health education campaigns, there are holes in legislatio­n that make me worry about the next generation.

Because of millions spent in lobbying by the vaping industry and fears of temporary economic losses, the 2020 flavor ban failed to be comprehens­ive, shifting the market over to disposable e-cigarettes that are exempt from this legislatio­n.

Dr. Michael Blaha, director of clinical research for the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovasc­ular Disease, put it best when he said, “For a lot of young people, it might be that the only reason they vape or use e-cigarettes is because they like the flavors.”

According to the 2020 National Youth Tobacco Survey, companies that sell disposable vapes, such as Hyde and Puffbar, have seen worrisome 1,000% increases in usage among high school-aged youths. With parents often unable to identify these products, which resemble USB drives, we need more comprehens­ive legislatio­n to prevent another generation of smokers.

A simple way of addressing the continuati­on of the youth vaping epidemic would be to create a more expansive flavor ban.

These benefits have been shown in studies done on multiple localities in which flavor bans have been implemente­d such as Lowell, Mass., showing a decrease in youths’ usage by up to 70%.

There are unintended side effects of these regulation­s as well. According to a study done by the Yale School of Public health, with a flavor ban bringing increased regulation of ecigarette­s, adult nicotine users tend to shift their usage toward traditiona­l combustibl­e cigarettes, contributi­ng to a habit that causes illnesses that kill hundreds of thousands each year and substantia­l strain on health care.

A comprehens­ive flavor ban is desperatel­y needed to curb youth appeal for vaping, but we need to disincenti­vize traditiona­l cigarettes from becoming a user’s substitute.

Through an increase in North Carolina’s cigarette excise tax, which is almost the lowest in the nation, we could help to prevent cigarettes from becoming a cheap alternativ­e under the conditions of new vaping regulation­s.

Despite the cloudiness and deception surroundin­g the vaping industry, the need for more responsive regulation to protect the next generation is more than clear.

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