Friday, January 29, 2016

E-cigarette use threatens years of US anti-smoking gains, says report

Top US health officials have warned that the growing use of e-cigarettes among young adults will undo decades of progress in ending the ‘tobacco epidemic’

Growing e-cigarette use among young people threatens decades of progress in shrinking tobacco use, top US health officials warned in a report released on Thursday.
The US surgeon general’s report is the first federal government review of the public health impact of e-cigarettes on young people across the country.
“Preventing tobacco use in any form among youth and young adults is critical to ending the tobacco epidemic in the United States,” said surgeon general Vivek Murthy.
Advocates say e-cigarettes could replace traditional cigarettes, while critics are concerned they are a gateway to tobacco use – especially in young people, who are more vulnerable to the addictive impact of nicotine.
The debate over the potential harms and benefits of e-cigarettes is a live one in the US and the UK. Many public health professionals in the UK believe that vaping is the best available option for those who would otherwise smoke tobacco, and that it is saving thousands of lives by enabling hardened smokers to quit. Public Health England has said it is 95% safer, and that the young people experimenting with e-cigarettes are the same people who try smoking tobacco.
“Evidence from the US is the same as in the UK in crucial respects,” said Professor John Britton, director of the UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies at Nottingham University. “Children experimenting with e-cigarettes are by and large those who are already experimenting with cigarettes or are smokers.”
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The surgeon general’s report said e-cigarettes are the most commonly used tobacco product among the young and are more popular than cigarettes, cigars and hookahs in the US. The use of e-cigarettes and other nicotine products by under-18s has jumped significantly after decades of declining rates of cigarette smoking.
Young people are not using the products for the same reasons as adults, the report said: “Although adults report using e-cigarettes as a cessation device, the evidence supporting the effectiveness of e-cigarettes as an aid for quitting conventional cigarettes remains unproven and nonexistent among youth.”
The most common reasons for young people to use e-cigarettes are curiosity, to avoid indoor smoking restrictions and as a less harmful alternative to conventional cigarettes, according to the report.
In 2014, use of e-cigarettes by young adults aged 18 to 24 surpassed that of adults aged 25 and older.
Sylvia Burwell, the US Department of Health and Human Services secretary, said the US must ensure progress in combatting traditional cigarette use isn’t compromised by the use of new tobacco products like e-cigarettes.
“The findings from this report reinforce the need to support evidence-based programs to prevent youth and young adults from using tobacco in any form, including e-cigarettes,” Burwell wrote. “The health and wellbeing of our nation’s young people depend on it.”
Kevin Fenton, national director of health and wellbeing at Public Health England, said the group recognised the concern in the US, where it had proved difficult to impose restrictions on the marketing of e-cigarettes. By contrast, England had put in place a ban on marketing to under-18s, advertising controls and quality standards. But, he said, “our review of the evidence found e-cigarette use carries a fraction of the risk of smoking, a conclusion reiterated by the Royal College of Physicians earlier this year. No new evidence has been published to contradict this, however we are closely monitoring any emerging evidence.”
The US report’s findings pull from existing research on e-cigarette use among people aged between 11 and 24 to show patterns of use and how it affects health.
This report was crafted in a similar vein to earlier surgeon general reports on youth tobacco use. The most recent of those was released in 2012, when e-cigarettes were less popular than they are now.
E-cigarette sales in the US grew to an estimated $3.5bn in 2015, according to Nielsen, but have been falling significantly since the end of last year.
The e-cigarette industry is dominated by traditional tobacco companies, who were targeted in the report for using similar tactics as those used to lure young users to tobacco. “Companies are promoting their products through television and radio advertisements that use celebrities, sexual content, and claims of independence to glamorize these addictive products and make them appealing to young people,” said Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, Thomas Frieden, in the report’s foreword.
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The report concludes with recommendations for combatting e-cigarette use among young people, including incorporating e-cigarettes into smoke-free policies, preventing youth access to e-cigarettes and significant increases to taxes and prices affiliated with e-cigarettes.
Murthy said: “Preventing tobacco use in any form among youth and young adults is critical to ending the tobacco epidemic in the United States.”
The report was launched on Thursday morning in Washington DC at an event where the surgeon general unveiled a new e-cigarette website and public service announcement. Speakers included Murthy, 16-year-old health activist Tyra Nicolay and American Academy of Pediatrics president Benard Dreyer.
Tyra, a member of the Navajo Nation, described how she was first introduced to e-cigarettes with a sour green apple flavored product but has since quit using e-cigarettes. “Today, I call on my peers to reject tobacco products, including e-cigarettes,” she said.
Dreyer said e-cigarette use “has raised alarm among pediatricians, tremendously”.
In October 2015, the AAP issued recommendations for e-cigarette public policy and regulations and guidance for physicians on how to speak with families about tobacco and “nicotine delivery devices” such as e-cigarettes.
“That’s why this report is so necessary and welcome at this time,” Dreyer said. “Because as you’ve heard, e-cigarettes have the potential to addict the next generation of children. It’s a major public health crisis, as far as we’re concerned.”
The British campaigning organisation Action on Smoking and Health said it was puzzled by the surgeon general’s concerns. “In the US as in the UK, young people are experimenting with e-cigarettes but vaping has not been associated with an increase in smoking, a point which is not made sufficiently clear in the report,” it said.
“While nicotine is not completely harmless, it is smoking that is lethal. In the UK we have a regulatory system that restricts advertising and controls sales to young people. There is no evidence of significant regular use by non-smoking children and, as in the US, smoking rates are going down, not up.”
Britton, the Nottingham University academic, attributed a drop in the UK smoking rate, down three percentage points in three years, to people taking up e-cigarettes in order to quit. “It is falling fast in the UK, almost certainly related to e-cigarettes.”

With the U.S. Surgeon General calling electronic cigarettes a “major health concern” for youths, the wildly popular vaping could lose some steam.
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy told The Washington Post on Thursday that young peopl e should not use any products containing nicotine, including e-cigarettes. "The key bottom line here is that the science tells us the use of nicotine-containing products by youth, including e-cigarettes, is unsafe," he said.
In recent years, the use of e-cigarettes among teens has jumped dramatically, with more high school students using them than regular cigarettes. A study by t he Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 16% of high school students used e-cigarettes in 2015, up from just 1.5% in 2011, according to Murthy’s full report.
The report cites possible addiction and the potential for long-term harm to brain development and respiratory health as key dangers for youths . It notes that human brain development continues until a person is roughly 25 years old.
New regulations put in place by the Food and Drug Administration over the summer already ban the sale of e-cigarettes and other tobacco products to minors (anyone under the age of 18). But, as is the case with cigarettes, that hasn’t stopped underage teens from getting their hands on them.

Industry representatives have argued that the increased regulatio n around e-cigarettes will raise manufacturers' costs and put smaller companies in the industry out of business. The Surgeon General’s new warning isn’t likely to help, either.
Still, Reynolds American, the U.S. tobacco giant behind the leading e-cigarette VUSE, agreed with the Surgeon General's assessment that minors should not use e-cigarettes. Jacob McConnico, a spokesman for Reynolds American, told Fortune in a statement that while the company would not comment on details of the report, “ we do agree with the Surgeon General that minors should never use e-cigarettes or any other tobacco product.”
"Additionally, adults who do not use tobacco products or who have quit using tobacco should not start using e-cigarettes or any other tobacco products,” he said.
Tyler Goldman—CEO of PAX Labs, which makes the popular PAX vaporizers and JUUL e-cigarettes—was also quick to agree with the new warning . "JUUL should not be used by those under the legal age, nor should any nicotine products, as stated by the U.S. Surgeon General," Goldman told Fortune. "PAX Labs discourages any underage consumers from using its products and strongly supports efforts to prohibit and prevent underage use of all nicotine products."
Goldman argue s that his company's e-cigarettes are intended as a tobacco alternative for the 36.5 million adult tobacco smokers in the U.S. While the exact long-term health effects of e-cigarettes are still up for debate, there is research that suggests the products are a relatively healthy alternative to traditional tobacco smoking. Earlier this year, the U.K.'s Royal College of Physicians argued that e-cigarettes are a helpful, and significantly less harmful, alternative to other methods of quitting smoking.
UPDATE: VMR Products, the Miami-based company that makes V2 e-cigarettes and vaporizers, also sent Fortune a statement in response to the Surgeon General's warning. The statement read, in part: "The electronic vapor industry is committed to keeping vaporizers out of the hands of underage consumers. These devices are not and have never been intended for anyone under the age of 18." The company also argued that it is important to recognize the importance of what it calls "the benefits of electronic vaporizers for adult smokers" and cited the study from the Royal College of Physicians.

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