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			 Big tobacco companies, including Altria Group Inc, Lorillard Tobacco 
			Co and Reynolds American Inc, are all developing e-cigarettes. The 
			battery-powered devices feature a glowing tip and a heating element 
			that turns liquid nicotine and other flavorings into a cloud of 
			vapor that users inhale. 
			 
			When researchers tested a random selection of 120 popular 
			e-cigarette websites, only four virtual stores prevented the sale of 
			e-liquids to minors, the study found. 
			 
			“At this time, the liquid nicotine and electronic cigarette market 
			in the United States is largely unregulated, which we believe to be 
			a large factor behind so few vendors implementing effective 
			restrictions on youth access,” said lead study author Dmitriy 
			Nikitin, a researcher at the University of California, Irvine. 
			 
			About 2 million middle- and high-school students tried e-cigarettes 
			in 2014, triple the number of teen users in 2013, the Centers for 
			Disease Control and Prevention reported last year. 
			 
			Adolescents who try e-cigarettes may be more than twice as likely to 
			move on to smoking conventional cigarettes as those who have never 
			tried the devices, previous research has found. 
			 
			For the current study, Nikitin and colleagues asked shoppers who 
			were 16 or 17 years old to use their own debit cards to attempt 
			online e-liquid purchases in July 2015. 
			
			  
			The youth successfully completed purchases from vendors in 34 
			states, with an average order cost of $13.16. 
			 
			Three of the four vendors that rejected purchases used 
			age-verification software during the transaction and found the teens 
			too young to buy e-liquid. One vendor asked a minor to upload an 
			image of her government-issued photo identification and rejected the 
			order because the ID showed she was underage. 
			 
			Even though nearly all of the sites sold to minors, 88 percent of 
			the products arrived in child-resistant packaging and slightly more 
			than half of the containers had sealed tops that required users to 
			squeeze the bottles to extract liquid nicotine. 
			 
			Overall, about 90 percent of the bottles noted that they contained 
			nicotine, but only 54 percent made any mention of health risks 
			associated with nicotine use. 
			 
			
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			Many of the orders came with free samples of e-liquid, and 15 orders 
			arrived with promotional materials including playing cards, Mike and 
			Ike candy, Laffy Taffy candy, Sweet Tarts candy, bracelets, 
			B’loonies Plastic Balloons and stickers. 
			 
			The study didn’t examine purchases of pre-filled cartridges of 
			liquid nicotine or e-cigarette devices, but previous research has 
			found that teens find it just as easy to buy these items online, the 
			authors note in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research. 
			 
			One limitation of the analysis, the researchers note, is that it 
			didn’t examine e-liquid sellers who operate on social networks like 
			Facebook, and Reddit, which may have led them to underestimate the 
			ease of online purchasing. 
			 
			Many U.S. states already ban sales of e-cigarettes to minors, but 
			vendors need clear guidelines to follow for preventing underage 
			purchases to make these policies more effective, said Adam 
			Leventhal, director of the University of Southern California Health, 
			Emotion and Addiction Laboratory in Los Angeles. 
			 
			Because kids can drink e-liquid, these products pose unique dangers 
			to children that don’t exist with traditional cigarettes, Leventhal, 
			who wasn’t involved in the study, added by email. 
			 
			“In addition to the health hazards of vaping nicotine, other forms 
			of nicotine ingestion like swallowing can be deadly,” Leventhal 
			said. “The high concentration of nicotine in some e-liquids if 
			swallowed or absorbed into the body through other means is toxic, 
			especially for infants and toddlers, who may be the siblings of 
			older children who might be purchasing e-liquids and not aware of 
			such hazards.” 
			 
			SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1YhdRhz Nicotine and Tobacco Research, online 
			March 19, 2016. 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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