• Home
  • Health & Wellness
  • Disclaimer
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice
  • Home
  • Health & Wellness
  • Disclaimer
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice
24/7 Health News
No Result
View All Result
Home Article

E-cigarettes get FDA approval: 5 essential reads on the harms and benefits of vaping

October 14, 2021
in Article
E-cigarettes get FDA approval: 5 essential reads on the harms and benefits of vaping
Ceci n'est pas un Magritte Georgina Parrino/EyeEm via Getty Images

After being on the U.S. market for around 15 years, an e-cigarette has, for the first time, been authorized for sale by the Food and Drug Administration.

The government agency announced on Oct. 12, 2021, that three products from the vaping company Vuse had been given the green light to be marketed, along with one device in which the approved cartridges are placed.

Although limited in scope – the authorization only relates to tobacco-flavored e-cigarettes and not the wider range of flavors that critics say are aimed at younger consumers – the move by the FDA is seen as a major development for the vaping industry. Many manufacturers of e-cigarettes are currently in a state of limbo, with their products still awaiting official authorization.

The FDA said that its decision on the Vuse products came after data showed e-cigarettes helped addicted adult smokers switch to vaping. But the move follows arguments over the merits, or harms, of e-cigarettes that have dragged on for years. It is a debate that The Conversation’s authors has followed carefully.

Table of Contents

  • The benefit to smokers
  • The harm to youth
  • A matter of taste
  • Other harms
  • So on to regulation

The benefit to smokers

The FDA highlighted the role that e-cigarettes can play in weening nicotine-addicted smokers off harmful cigarettes. This concurs, to a degree, with recent research.

Reviewing evidence from 50 studies that included more than 12,000 participants, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson at the University of Oxford found that the findings provided more confidence that e-cigarettes with nicotine – such as those now approved by the FDA – can help people quit smoking better than other replacement aids such as gum or patches. The review also found “no evidence of serious harm of e-cigarettes with nicotine.” Hartmann-Boyce and Lindon note that the data was limited, meaning that such harms cannot be ruled out.

The two Oxford scholars conclude that “e-cigarettes with nicotine are not risk free but are considerably less harmful than smoking.” When translated into action, this means: “If you don’t smoke, don’t start to use e-cigarettes. If you do smoke, consider switching.”




Read more:
New evidence shows e-cigarettes can help people quit smoking


The harm to youth

But it is the concern over nonsmokers – especially teenagers – taking up e-cigarettes for the first time that has fueled the debate. University of Michigan’s Tammy Chang and Marika Waselewski note that between 2011 and 2019, e-cigarette use among high-schoolers skyrocketed from 1.5% to 27.5%.

The pair surveyed over 1,000 people between the ages of 14 and 24 to discover what was behind the surge. Asked why they thought people their own age vaped, respondents gave answers like “social pressures, the desire to experiment and ‘the buzz’ from the product.” Most were aware of the dangers.

Although the majority of young vapers go for flavored e-cigarettes, among them fruit, menthol, mint, candy and dessert, Chang and Waselewski found that just 5% of young respondents mentioned the taste as a reason for vaping.




Read more:
Juuling among US youth is about the cool factor, new study suggests


A matter of taste

Even if not that many young people mentioned taste as a reason to start vaping, having flavors that appeal to a younger audience has been a key strategy of the e-cigarette business.

Leah Ranney, director of tobacco prevention and evaluation at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, argues that companies have deliberately used flavoring, alongside other youth-targeting strategies, to lure younger nonsmokers into vaping.

“The use of appealing packages and flavors has a significant impact on young people, causing them to perceive these tobacco products as less harmful and, in turn, making them more likely to experiment and continue using tobacco products,” she concludes.




Read more:
Flavored e-cigarettes sweetly lure kids into vaping and also mislead them to dismiss danger, studies suggest


Other harms

Concerns over e-cigarettes are not restricted to how it may be leading teenagers to nicotine products. As Ilona Jaspers, also at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, notes, e-cigarettes have only been popular for a decade or so – too early to say for sure what the long-term health risks will be to users. Jaspers studies how inhaled chemicals and particles affect human health and is far from convinced that scientists are fully aware of the extent of the dangers of vaping as yet.

“It took decades for epidemiologists to discover that regularly inhaling the smoke from burning plant material, tobacco, caused lung cancer. Why would the scientific community be so quick to assume e-cigarettes would not have hidden dangers that might take years to manifest too?” Jaspers writes.

She notes that there are hundreds of recorded cases of lung injuries that are associated with vaping and that the “onset of these significant health problems is much faster” than with smoking-related diseases. In short, she argues, a comparison with regular cigarette smoking is missing the point: Vaping in itself has health risks.




Read more:
Vaping likely has dangers that could take years for scientists to even know about


.

So on to regulation

Whether comparisons to regular old smoking is appropriate for the relatively new e-cigarette sector is part of the reason it took the FDA so long to get around to regulating vaping products.

Michael P. Eriksen, of Georgia State University, explained in an article in 2016 that the federal government had been slow in casting a regulatory eye over e-cigarettes because the courts ruled that e-cigarettes were tobacco products and not drug-device combinations, which would have required FDA oversight. Things were further muddied when President Barack Obama’s Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act allowed the FDA to regulate some tobacco products, but “did not explicitly include e-cigarettes,” Eriksen notes.

As a result, the e-cigarette industry was “basically unfettered” for a period of time. That changed in August 2016 when the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products was handed regulatory authority over all electronic nicotine delivery systems, including e-cigarettes, a move that led to this week’s announcement that a trio of e-cigarette products had become the first to get authorizations for sale in the U.S.




Read more:
Could FDA e-cigarette regulations help more people quit smoking?


The Conversation

ShareTweetSharePin
Next Post
What is family estrangement? A relationship expert describes the problem and research agenda

What is family estrangement? A relationship expert describes the problem and research agenda

Most Read

What causes stuttering? A speech pathology researcher explains the science and the misconceptions around this speech disorder

What causes stuttering? A speech pathology researcher explains the science and the misconceptions around this speech disorder

December 15, 2022
morning back pain

Morning Again Ache Trigger Is Not the Mattress

October 11, 2021

4 steps to building a healthier relationship with your phone

January 28, 2025

Why Circadian Rhythms Matter for Your Health

July 30, 2024
lower back pain relief exercises

5 decrease again ache aid workouts

October 11, 2021
Nasal vaccines promise to stop the COVID-19 virus before it gets to the lungs – an immunologist explains how they work

Nasal vaccines promise to stop the COVID-19 virus before it gets to the lungs – an immunologist explains how they work

December 14, 2022
bleeding in gum

When The Bleeding in gum Is Severe ?

October 11, 2021
Good Night Sleep

6 Causes of Good Evening Sleep

October 11, 2021
3 years after legalization, we have shockingly little information about how it changed cannabis use and health harms

3 years after legalization, we have shockingly little information about how it changed cannabis use and health harms

October 15, 2021
Kick up your heels – ballroom dancing offers benefits to the aging brain and could help stave off dementia

Kick up your heels – ballroom dancing offers benefits to the aging brain and could help stave off dementia

January 3, 2023
Biden is getting prostate cancer treatment, but that’s not the best choice for all men − a cancer researcher describes how she helped her father decide

Biden is getting prostate cancer treatment, but that’s not the best choice for all men − a cancer researcher describes how she helped her father decide

May 20, 2025
Ten small changes you can make today to prevent weight gain

Ten small changes you can make today to prevent weight gain

October 12, 2021

COVID vaccines: how one can pace up rollout in poorer international locations

October 5, 2021

Maximize Your Performance – Sync with Your Circadian Rhythms

August 9, 2024
Five ways to avoid pain and injury when starting a new exercise regime

Five ways to avoid pain and injury when starting a new exercise regime

December 30, 2022

This Simple Hygiene Habit Could Cut Your Risk of Stroke, New Research Reveals

February 1, 2025

Multiple sclerosis: the link with earlier infection just got stronger – new study

October 12, 2021
Support and collaboration with health-care providers can help people make health decisions

Support and collaboration with health-care providers can help people make health decisions

December 16, 2021
Greece to make COVID vaccines mandatory for over-60s, but do vaccine mandates work?

Greece to make COVID vaccines mandatory for over-60s, but do vaccine mandates work?

December 1, 2021
woman covered with white blanket

Exploring the Impact of Sleep Patterns on Mental Health

August 4, 2024
Nurses’ attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination for their children are highly influenced by partisanship, a new study finds

Nurses’ attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination for their children are highly influenced by partisanship, a new study finds

December 2, 2022
News of war can impact your mental health — here’s how to cope

Binge-eating disorder is more common than many realise, yet it’s rarely discussed – here’s what you need to know

December 2, 2022
FDA limits access to COVID-19 vaccine to older adults and other high-risk groups – a public health expert explains the new rules

FDA limits access to COVID-19 vaccine to older adults and other high-risk groups – a public health expert explains the new rules

May 21, 2025
As viral infections skyrocket, masks are still a tried-and-true way to help keep yourself and others safe

As viral infections skyrocket, masks are still a tried-and-true way to help keep yourself and others safe

December 14, 2022
GPs don’t give useful weight-loss advice – new study

GPs don’t give useful weight-loss advice – new study

December 16, 2022
Four ways to avoid gaining weight over the festive period – but also why you shouldn’t fret about it too much

Four ways to avoid gaining weight over the festive period – but also why you shouldn’t fret about it too much

December 22, 2022
Nutrition advice is rife with misinformation − a medical education specialist explains how to tell valid health information from pseudoscience

Nutrition advice is rife with misinformation − a medical education specialist explains how to tell valid health information from pseudoscience

January 28, 2025
How hot is too hot for the human body? Our lab found heat + humidity gets dangerous faster than many people realize

How hot is too hot for the human body? Our lab found heat + humidity gets dangerous faster than many people realize

July 6, 2022
How regulatory agencies, not the courts, are imposing COVID-19 vaccine mandates

How regulatory agencies, not the courts, are imposing COVID-19 vaccine mandates

October 24, 2021
The promise of repairing bones and tendons with human-made materials

The promise of repairing bones and tendons with human-made materials

January 4, 2022
  • Home
  • Health & Wellness
  • Disclaimer

© 2020 DAILY HEALTH NEWS

  • Home
  • Health & Wellness
  • Disclaimer
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice

© 2020 DAILY HEALTH NEWS