One in five teens have
tried e-cigarettes, a British study finds
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[March 31, 2015]
LONDON (Reuters) - One in five
teenagers have experimented with e-cigarettes, a large study of British
school students showed on Tuesday, fuelling debate about the widespread
availability of the electronic devices.
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Many experts view the metal tubes that heat nicotine-laced liquid
into an inhalable vapor as a lower-risk alternative to smoking. But
questions remain about long-term safety and their use among
impressionable adolescents.
In a survey of more than 16,000 people aged 14-17 years in northwest
England in 2013, 19.2 percent said they had tried or purchased
e-cigarettes, according to a paper published in the journal BMC
Public Health.
E-cigarette use, or "vaping", was highest among smokers, reaching
75.8 percent in those with a habit of at least five a day, although
15.8 percent of teenage vapers had never smoked conventional
cigarettes.
Karen Hughes of the Centre for Public Health at Liverpool John
Moores University and other authors of the study said the research
suggested experimentation, rather than a desire to quit smoking, was
the main driver of teen use.
"There is an urgent need for controls on the promotion and sale of
e-cigarettes to children," they concluded.
Wilson Compton of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse wrote in
an accompanying commentary that e-cigarettes, at least for some
groups, were adding a new recreational drug experience to an
existing repertoire of risky behaviors.
Other experts, however, cautioned against jumping to conclusions,
particularly since the study did not follow up to see whether
children continued to use e-cigarettes after experimenting with
initial puffs.
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"Other surveys have so far found that progressing from ever trying
an e-cigarette to regular use amongst non-smoking children is very
rare or entirely absent, suggesting that, to date, e-cigarettes are
not responsible for creating a new generation of nicotine addicts,"
said Linda Bauld, professor of health policy at the University of
Stirling.
More than 2 million adults use e-cigarettes in Britain, about one
third of whom are ex-smokers and two-thirds current smokers,
according to the charity Action on Smoking and Health.
Nearly all big tobacco companies - including Philip Morris
International, British American Tobacco, Japan Tobacco International
and Imperial Tobacco Group - now sell e-cigarettes to diversify away
from the market for traditional cigarettes, which is shrinking as
more people quit or cut back.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Susan Fenton)
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