Couldn't find what you looking for?

TRY OUR SEARCH!

More than twice as many American teenagers used electronic cigarettes in 2012 compared to the previous year. Public health experts worry that millions of teens may become addicted to nicotine.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report that their surveys in 2012 found that 10% of American teens had tried electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), compared to 4.7% in 2011.

The CDC also found that 2.7% of middle school students had used e-cigarettes in 2012, compared to 1.4% in 2011.

CDC public health officials believe that the exploding popularity of electronic cigarettes, often advertised as a safer alternative for adults who are addicted to tobacco, may lead to millions of new cigarette addicts among American teenagers.

What Are E-Cigarettes?

E-cigarettes are battery-powered, reusable devices designed to look and feel like regular cigarettes. The e-cigarette uses no tobacco. Instead, it vaporizes a mixture of nicotine and aromatic liquids into smoke. Nicotine addicts can get their hit of nicotine without exposure to tar and cancer-causing compounds in tobacco.

Why Do E-Cigarettes Appeal to Teens?

In the United States, for as long as anyone can remember, smoking cigarettes has always been seen as cool. In the twenty-first century, however, cigarettes with a different scent, such as menthol or cloves, and tobacco delivered in a different way, such as by a hookah, are generally considered "more cool."

The youngest Americans have never known as time that smoking cigarettes was not considered dangerous to health. The connections between cigarettes, cancer, cardiovascular disease, and cancer, were largely unknown or ignored before the 1960's. Early in the twentieth century, doctors actually prescribed cigarettes for their patients--not that this would a good thing.

Teens understand, however, that cigarettes are linked to cancer, and that e-cigarettes do not contain carcinogens.

Clove cigarettes have become passe, and it's impossible to light up a hookah between classes, but e-cigarettes offer both the cachet and convenience of smoking the real thing, over and over and over again, without the inconvenience of snus and other smokeless tobacco products.

"Not Marketed to Teens," But Flavors Include Ice Cream

Lorillard Tobacco Corporation, which is the primary provider of e-cigarettes in the USA, insists that it does not market its product to teens. Its nicotine cartridges, however, come in flavors including cherry crush and vivid vanilla, which it says "tastes like ice cream."

Teens who smoke e-cigarettes do not, by and large, limit themselves to smoking e-cigarettes. The Centers for Disease Control survey found that 76.3% of teens who use e-cigarettes also smoked regular cigarettes during the same 30-day period during which they smoked electronic cigarettes. The CDC did not report whether teens who used e-cigarettes were more or less likely to use "chew" or snuff.

What Is the Problem with E-Cigarettes?

The reality is that e-cigarettes really are less problematic than regular cigarettes in terms of future health risk, but they are not risk-free.

The seven most important health concerns for teen users of e-cigarettes are these:

  • Users of e-cigarettes can become addicted to nicotine. They could satisfy their nicotine cravings with e-cigarettes and avoid exposure to the carcinogens in tobacco smoke, but most teens don't. 
  • By a ratio of about 3 to 1, teens who use electronic cigarettes also smoke regular cigarettes.
  • Teens often express the idea that regular cigarettes are bad, and any alternatives to regular cigarettes are OK. Smoking cigars and using water pipes, however, are probably as dangerous to long-term health as smoking tobacco cigarettes.
  • E-cigarettes are often the gateway to a smoking habit. A researcher who analyzed tweets about e-cigarettes noted a number of exchanges on the lines of "Do you smoke?" with the response "Want to start?"
  • Only 10 to 13 puffs on an e-cigarette are necessary to maximize the amount of nicotine in the user's bloodstream. This means it is easy for users to get a nicotine fix from e-cigarettes (and studies indicate that people addicted to regular cigarettes may find it easier to quit if they use e-cigarettes), but it is also easier for smoking novices to get addicted to nicotine.
  • The nicotine in cigarette smoke from either electronic cigarettes or regular cigarettes concentrates its effects in a part of the brain called the hippocampus, which is involved in the formation of short-term memories. The nicotine actually makes it easier for smokers to pay attention to more details as they study, but it also creates more memories, a flood of information, when they take tests.
  • Electronic cigarettes can become a hobby. Some users collect different flavors of nicotine cartridges. The more fun the user has with the product, the harder it can be to quit using it.
  • Just twelve states (Wisconsin, Utah, Tennessee, New York, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Minnesota, Maryland, Iowa, Idaho, Colorado, and California) ban the sale of e-cigarettes to minors. Most states, however, have strict laws regarding the sale of regular cigarettes to minors. It's not rare for a seller to get six months in jail for a sale. Users of e-cigarettes may not be aware of criminal liability for related activities in their states.

Electronic cigarettes are even more popular among teens aged 15 to 19 outside the United States. A study of e-cigarettes by older teens found that 23% of older teens in Poland used them. 

There is no doubt e-cigarettes are here to stay. But if teens use them, they should at least use the lower-nicotine cartridges to minimize their risk of addiction. Or even better, teens should not use them at all. Leave them for middle-aged adults struggling to beat their tobacco addiction.

Read full article