Remember the Teen Vaping 'Epidemic'?
Policies inspired by that exaggerated threat continue to undermine the harm-reducing potential of e-cigarettes.

Remember the "epidemic" of underage nicotine vaping? For years, activists, politicians, and public health officials have been warning that a surge in e-cigarette use by teenagers would hook a generation of young people on nicotine and encourage them to smoke.
That never happened, as new federal survey data confirm. But policies adopted in response to that overblown threat continue to undermine the harm-reducing potential of vaping products by making them less attractive to current and former smokers.
According to the latest National Youth Tobacco Survey, which is overseen by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 10 percent of high school students reported past-month e-cigarette use in 2023, down from 14 percent last year and more than 27 percent in 2019. Among middle school students, the 2023 rate was 4.6 percent, less than half the 2019 rate.
How many of those past-month vapers might reasonably be described as addicted to nicotine? A quarter of them—less than 2 percent of all respondents—reported vaping every day in the previous month, meaning that, as usual, the vast majority were occasional users.
This does not look like an epidemic of nicotine addiction. Nor did the fear that vaping would lead to smoking pan out.
Even at the peak of underage vaping, the downward trend in adolescent smoking not only continued but accelerated. In the 2023 survey, less than 2 percent of high school students reported smoking cigarettes in the previous month—down from 16 percent in 2011 and (according to a survey of 10th- and 12th-graders) more than 30 percent in 1997.
The CDC describes vaping as "tobacco product use," even though e-cigarettes do not contain tobacco, and lumps it in with smoking, even though it does not involve combustion. But while the CDC is loath to admit it, the shift from smoking to vaping—in any age group—is indisputably an improvement in terms of health risks.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) acknowledges that vaping is far less hazardous than smoking, and it supposedly is committed to maintaining the availability of what it calls "electronic nicotine delivery systems" (ENDS) as a potentially lifesaving alternative for cigarette smokers. Yet to deter underage use, the FDA so far has approved only tobacco-flavored ENDS, even though former smokers overwhelmingly prefer other flavors.
That policy makes ENDS less appealing to people who already have switched from smoking to vaping or might be interested in doing so. The results are predictable: A recent FDA-supported study of sales data from across the country found that state and local restrictions on ENDS flavors were associated with increased purchases of conventional cigarettes.
"We find that ENDS flavor policies reduce flavored ENDS sales as intended, but also increase cigarette sales across age groups," the researchers reported. "As cigarettes are much more lethal than ENDS, the high rate of substitution estimated here suggests that, on net, any population health benefits of ENDS flavor policies are likely small or even negative."
Although "flavored ENDS products remain widely available in states that do not prohibit their sales," the study's authors noted, the FDA seems to be "paving a path towards a de facto national ENDS flavor prohibition." That policy, they said, entails an "inequitable tradeoff" because it "prioritizes youth over the 11.2% of US adults [who] smoke."
Since the FDA has not made a serious effort to enforce its de facto ban against the thousands of suppliers who are theoretically violating it, adults can still purchase ENDS in a wide variety of flavors from vape shops, tobacconists, and online vendors. Preserving those options for adults is consistent with efforts to reduce underage consumption, as the ongoing decline in adolescent vaping shows.
The flavor restrictions embraced by regulators and legislators threaten to harm public health in the name of protecting it. To save teenagers from an exaggerated danger, bureaucrats and politicians are sacrificing the interests, and perhaps the lives, of adult smokers across the country.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Now that we're making up numbers, it's a pandemic?
PM Sunak just forced his king to abdicate his reason by reading tobacco prohibition into his annual Speech to Parliament
Charles III should start planting tobacco throughout the Duchy Of Cornwall before Rishi the Roundhead burns all the books in the British library written under the influence of the evil weed.
Lurchin, watchin the clock,
his brain has stopped,
like Biden, plopped.
Tell him, read the card, he practices his speech,
As he falls on the floor, slurs all over,
Portends to keep with D crooks all over.
He’s retarded, he’s a Dem sped,
Scant mind in Fetterman.
He dreams no color, he is brain dead,
Scant mind in Fetterman
Scant mind in Fetterman
Scant mind in Fetterman
prose
I suppose
as far.
as it goes,
falls to deaf ear.
as citizens fear.
our freedoms decline
what was yours,
is now mine.
as Gov. rule
with incompetent
FOOL !
Watching history
Unfold.
Doing what we
are told.
can we change our fate?
before its too late?
rhyme or reason
Isn't the season?
hope you like my poor attempt with, what would you call it?
--------- I, Grampa
Less and less kids aren't doing it because it was a fad and they found out vaping just doesn't look as cool as they thought.
Smoking is way cooler for sure.
Maybe it wasn’t the FDA’s job to raise teenagers…
Maybe regulating food and drugs was NEVER the ‘Union’ of State’s job at all.
The real agenda, as some of the "Public Service" Announcement ads from the CA government and "truthout" (who are funded by money extorted from tobacco companies), is to try to shut down the tobacco industry as a whole; what's not made clear is that the real offense which "justifies" such a mission is the failure of those companies to provide significant campaign contributions to the pols who capaign on the platform of literally outlawing their business and shuttering the companies altogther while continuing to support their political opponents. Since the companies who make cigarettes also have access to and experience processing tobacco, they also manufacture a lot of the nicotine-delivery cartridges or "juice" and for some brands make the vape devices themselves.
If the "believers in science" out there weren't so good at doublethink, the Covid vax debate would be a great tool to undermine the anti-vape movement. After a decade or more of widespread use, a common reason for the supposed need to revoke FDA approval for systems like Juul is that "there's not enough data" to believe it's safe to let adults keep using it as a substitute for smoking; the people who pushed that claim for years, are now practically camping waiting for the "emergency" approval to get their young children dosed with whatever the latest covid booster happens to be, even when the actual "approval" FDA is in the form of a letter stating "we don't know whether this is really safe, but think there's a chance it might provide some benefit" instead of certifying that the new formulation is proven to be both safe (within certain thresholds) and effective.
The reason that many nicotine vapes are called "tobacco products" is because the nicotine they use for many brands of them is derived from tobacco plants; ironically banning tobacco altogether might make life harder for a number of organic farmers, who use liquid nicotine as a natural pesticide (the purpose for which plants started producing the compound originally)
Exaggerated threat? Bull crap. I am a liberty guy, but vape is in no way better than traditional smoke. My kid, now 27, got seriously addicted to nicotine smoking vape cigs when he was in high school. Yeah, he was being a dumbass. But kicking the nicotine addiction was very hard for him and awful to watch. Years ago I stopped traditional cigs with a few days of being annoyed. I stopped weed more than once; OK stopped isn't the right word, but I wasn't addicted in any way. The high dose of nicotine in vapes is terrible. He has anxiety, the shakes and several weeks of irritability and depression. It finally subsided, but it was awful to watch and I'm sure much worse to live.
Those that thing vape is an exaggerated threat are either uninformed or heartless. Being addicted or vaping doesn't make you a bad person. Saying it isn't a big deal and harmful does.
Some people get the shakes when they can't eat doughnuts. Your son could have purchased vape juice with less and less and less nicotine. He could have even mixed it himself. Try dialing down your nicotine with cigarettes. You simply can't. ...And the real question is if you become addicted to vaping nicotine your whole life does that impact your health as smoking cigarettes or cigars? I want to see a lot more data on THAT.
Dialing down the nicotine is exactly the issue. It is super addictive. And the issue was the "Teen" vaping epidemic. If you want to get yourself addicted as an adult, that's liberty. But vape was with nicotine, is, marketed as a safe, soft, alternative for the kids. That's the problem.
prose
I suppose
as far.
as it goes,
falls to deaf ear.
as citizens fear.
our freedoms decline
what was yours,
is now mine.
as Gov. rule
with incompetent
FOOL !
Watching history
Unfold.
Doing what we
are told.
can we change our fate?
before its too late?
rhyme or reason
Isn't the season?
hope you like my poor attempt with, what would you call it?
--------- I, Grampa
The young always are trying to escape reality. why do they refuse to use common sense and believe their peers? before others who have traveled the same path. I remember several things some proved fatal. Sniffing glue... inhaling propellant from paint cans. always looking to escape reality. Sometimes that escape can be terrifying.-------------I, Grampa