Instead, researchers found, adolescents who experimented with
e-cigarettes ended up smoking traditional cigarettes just as much as
teens who never tried vaping.
"The findings show that e-cigs do nothing to deter the amount of
combustible smoking in youth," said lead study author Jessica
Barrington-Trimis of the Keck School of Medicine at the University
of Southern California in Los Angeles. "On the contrary, they
increase the likelihood that vaping teens will start smoking."
In the initial phase of the study, researchers surveyed 6,258 high
schoolers in Southern California and Connecticut about their vaping
and smoking usage. Roughly 14 to 17 percent had used traditional
cigarettes and 23 to 29 percent had tried e-cigarettes.
Next, researchers surveyed the teens again one year later. Overall,
7 percent of the teens who had never tried cigarettes had started
smoking traditional combustible cigarettes, researchers report in
Pediatrics. But the proportion was higher - at 21 percent - among
the teens who had been using e-cigarettes.
Compared to the youth who never tried vaping, those who did were
more than four times more likely to be dabbling with cigarettes or
smoking one to two days a month by the end of the study.
And vapers were also more than three times more likely to be
frequent smokers by the end of the study.
Teens who were using both combustible and e-cigarettes were more
likely to continue using both than to switch to vaping only.
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.
Some previous research has suggested e-cigarettes might help some
adult smokers cut back on traditional cigarettes or quit altogether.
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"The research on e-cigarettes for smoking cessation among adults is
mixed," said Benjamin Chaffee, a researcher at the University of
California San Francisco who wasn't involved in the study. Some
adults may be able to use e-cigarettes as a cessation aid, but some
studies suggest vaping may make it harder to quit, he said.
The picture for teens is even murkier.
"We know very little about e-cigarettes and smoking cessation among
adolescents," Chaffee added. "Smoking cessation does not appear to
be a major reason that youth try e-cigarettes."
Instead, the current study offers fresh evidence that vaping may
lure some young people to tobacco who might otherwise avoid it or
make it harder for them to stop using these tobacco products once
they start.
"These findings did not provide strong evidence of transition away
from cigarette smoking as a potential public health benefit of
e-cigarette use," Barrington-Trimis said by email. "Collectively,
findings from this paper suggest that e-cigarette use may result in
an overall adverse impact to the public health of youth and young
adults."
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how vaping might directly lead to smoking or impact teen
cigarette use.
Still, the results suggest vaping won't help teens stop smoking,
said Janet Audrain-McGovern of the Perelman School of Medicine at
the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
"This important study tells us that youth who use e-cigarettes are
more likely to continue to use combustible cigarettes after
initiating," Audrain-McGovern, who wasn't involved in the study,
said by email. "Youth who smoke cigarettes and use e-cigarettes do
not appear to be quitting smoking."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2SO9xeg Pediatrics, online November 5, 2018.
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