E-Cigarettes Can Be Lifesavers
An FDA-sponsored report confirms the harm-reducing potential of vaping yet worries, implausibly, that it will boost adolescent smoking.
This week the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) weighed in on the question of whether e-cigarettes are a public health menace or a public health boon. The answer is yes, according to a NASEM report published on Tuesday.
The report, which was sponsored by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), concludes that "e-cigarettes cannot be simply categorized as either beneficial or harmful to health." While that is true in principle, the report gives too much weight to scenarios in which these products could be harmful, even while confirming that they dramatically reduce exposure to toxins and carcinogens for smokers who switch to them.
NASEM's advice is important because it will guide the FDA as the agency decides how to regulate the vaping industry, which last year got a four-year reprieve from rules that threatened to drive the vast majority of companies out of business. The demands that the FDA ultimately imposes on manufacturers of vaping equipment and liquids will affect the options available to consumers and their knowledge of them, which in turn will determine the extent to which they take advantage of products that could save their lives.
The NASEM report, which is the work of a committee chaired by University of Washington toxicologist David Eaton, acknowledges the harm-reducing potential of e-cigarettes. "E-cigarette aerosol contains fewer numbers and lower levels of most toxicants than smoke from combustible tobacco cigarettes does," Eaton et al. say. "Laboratory tests of e-cigarette ingredients, in vitro toxicological tests, and short-term human studies suggest that e-cigarettes are likely to be far less harmful than combustible tobacco cigarettes."
When people who otherwise would be smoking use e-cigarettes instead, that represents an unambiguous gain from a public health perspective, which seeks to minimize disease and preventable death. "If e-cigarette use by adult smokers leads to long-term abstinence from combustible tobacco cigarettes," the report says, "the benefit to public health could be considerable."
But Eaton and his colleagues worry that e-cigarettes also could increase tobacco-related morbidity and mortality if they encourage teenagers to smoke. Depending on how big that effect is, they say, it might even outweigh the benefit from smoking cessation among adults.
That concern seems wildly implausible in light of current trends. Cigarette smoking by teenagers has continued to fall despite a surge in experimentation with vaping, and last year it reached the lowest level ever recorded by the Monitoring the Future Study, which began surveying high school students in 1975.
Two other factors make it unlikely that significant numbers of teenagers become smokers after getting hooked on nicotine in e-cigarettes. The vast majority of nonsmoking teenagers who vape do so only occasionally, and most of them use nicotine-free e-liquids.
Against these facts, the NASEM report cites studies that find teenagers who try vaping are more likely than those who don't to subsequently try smoking. According to Eaton et al., these studies amount to "substantial evidence that e-cigarette use increases risk of ever using combustible tobacco cigarettes among youth and young adults."
As the report acknowledges, however, these observational studies do not distinguish between correlation and causation. They may simply show that teenagers who are inclined to try vaping are also inclined to try smoking. Such research cannot tell us how many of these teenagers become regular smokers or whether they would have experimented with tobacco even if e-cigarettes did not exist.
Under the collectivist calculus prescribed by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, Eaton et al. note, it is not enough to show that e-cigarettes are much less hazardous than the conventional kind and therefore offer a big benefit to smokers who might want to switch. The FDA also must be persuaded that the product, on balance, benefits "the population as a whole."
I think e-cigarettes easily pass this test. I also think it is the wrong test for a free society that respects individual choices and the markets that respond to them.
© Copyright 2018 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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We wouldn't want them taking gateway drags.
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If only there were some way to determine if they already had an interest in inhaling from devices referred to as "cigs" for recreational purposes.
"e-cigarettes cannot be simply categorized as either beneficial or harmful to health."
Well, duh. Literally everything can be both harmful and beneficial. Water is one of the most basic necessities of life but attempting to breathe the stuff will kill you.
Not just trying to breath it. Drink too much water too quickly and it will kill you.
Water Toxicity
I went from 2 packs a day 5 years ago to just vaping low nic juice now. Vaping is an immense help, I still have my nicotine fix with a lot less side effects.
The FDA also must be persuaded that the product, on balance, benefits "the population as a whole."
That's what you get when the FDA sticks its nose where it doesn't belong.
It wasn't the FDA that came up with this "population as a whole" nonsens-it was the progs in Congress and special interests who authored the bill. The FDA actually did not want to be involved in tobacco regulation.
I just noticed CNN hyping this as 'proving' that vaping is dangerous, despite what 'they' say.
My thoughts and prayers are with you. Nobody should have to notice CNN - especially this early in the morning.
I gave up watching CNN at least 20 years ago. If its on in an airport or public place, I turn my back.
So did I. It was either their website, or perhaps it was Google News. Anyway, the usual crap.
While the market is already making this irrelevant. Consumers heard that some vape products might not be all that good for them and suddenly, makers began concocting all natural varieties. Vaping regulation is a solution in search of a problem...or the FDA sees tobacco use dwindling and needs something else to focus their nanny tendencies on.
I do not trust any of the regulators on vape product quality, since the vast majority of them are against vaping PERIOD.
Who funds the FDA? Big Tobacco, Big Pharma, Big food
Who is the FDA populated with? Lobbyists, former employees of industries that are FDA regulated and politicians.
Smoked for 35 years, I'm 51. Tried everything to quit and failed. Even relapsed after 14 months of not smoking once. Started vaping with 12 mg of nicotine in the juice on 6/24/15. Widdled down the nicotine in my vape juice to 0 mg over a 1.5 year period.
I still vape---less, but still don't smoke. Vaping works and is way safer. They know it and want it stopped and are passing ridiculous laws to try and stop it.