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						 E-cigarette 
						ads' wide reach among U.S. youth alarming: CDC 
			
   
            
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		[January 06, 2016] 
		By Barbara Liston 
			
		(Reuters) - E-cigarette companies are 
		reaching about seven in 10 U.S. middle- and high-school students with 
		advertisements employing themes of sex, independence and rebellion that 
		hooked previous generations on regular cigarettes, a government study 
		released on Tuesday said. 
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			 The marketing strategy could reverse decades of progress in 
			preventing tobacco use among youth, warned the U.S. Centers for 
			Disease Control and Prevention, which suggested tighter controls on 
			e-cigarette sales to reduce minors' access. 
			 
			"The e-cigarette advertising we're seeing is like the old-time Wild 
			West," CDC Director Tom Frieden told reporters. "No rules, no 
			regulations and heavy spending advertising the products." 
			 
			E-cigarette use among middle- and high-school students soared over 
			the past five years, surpassing use of regular cigarettes in 2014, 
			according to CDC statistics. Spending on e-cigarette advertising 
			also jumped, increasing to an estimated $115 million in 2014 from 
			$6.4 million in 2011. 
			  
			The CDC's National Youth Tobacco Survey found that 68.9 percent of 
			this age group saw e-cigarette ads from one or more media sources in 
			2014, most commonly in stores but also online, on television and in 
			movies or magazines. 
			 
			E-cigarettes contain cartridges that typically hold nicotine as well 
			as other liquids and flavorings, and a heating element to create a 
			vapor that the user inhales. 
			 
			Many researchers believe e-cigarettes are less harmful than regular 
			cigarettes, but the risks are still being studied. 
			 
			Frieden said any tobacco use by young people could lead to brain 
			damage, addiction and higher risk of becoming regular cigarette 
			smokers. 
			
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			"The use of e-cigarettes in kids appears increasingly likely to 
			result in an increased risk of using regular cigarettes," Frieden 
			said. 
			 
			Most states have passed laws banning the sale of e-cigarettes to 
			minors, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's proposal to 
			regulate the products is under federal review. 
			 
			Altria Group <MO.N>, which owns three U.S. tobacco companies, is 
			among e-cigarette sellers that have said they favor laws that 
			prevent minors purchasing their products. 
			 
			(Reporting by Barbara Liston in Orlando, Fla.; Editing by Colleen 
			Jenkins, Lisa Von Ahn and Andrew Hay) 
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