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			 And many of these minors - to whom it is illegal to sell nicotine 
			delivery products - are retweeting JUUL's Twitter messages, 
			amplifying the company's reach to a teen audience, researchers 
			reported. 
 "JUUL says it's not trying to target adolescents, but you can see 
			that a good proportion of the company's Twitter audience are under 
			18," said Dr. Kar-Hai Chu, an assistant professor of medicine at the 
			Center for Research on Media, Technology and Health at the 
			University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "I think we should be 
			very worried about this."
 
 The new findings bolster anecdotal evidence that JUUL has become 
			popular among teens. "The major reason we decided to do the study is 
			there is a lot of anecdotal evidence of kids using JUUL and getting 
			addicted" Chu said. "We wanted to systematically look at it."
 
			
			 
			
 Experts say part of JUUL's appeal to teens may be the way the 
			product looks and how it's marketed. The device looks like a flash 
			drive and it can be plugged into a computer to recharge. It is 
			available in multiple colors and comes in an attractive package. The 
			e-liquid comes in numerous youth-friendly flavors, such as mango and 
			fruit medley, and is packaged in a "pod."
 
 To get a closer look at teen interest in the product, Chu and his 
			colleagues pored through tweets and found 3,239 from JUUL's official 
			Twitter account between February 2017 and January 2018. These tweets 
			were retweeted 1,124 times by 721 unique Twitter users. Trained 
			human coders examined each of the user's Twitter profiles to 
			determine if the individual was under age 18. Their job was easy 
			when the user specified his or her age. If not, then the coder 
			looked for clues in the user's tweets, such as if the user mentioned 
			a grade level or an age-specific event in a tweet, such as, 'I'm 
			excited about my upcoming sweet 16." If there was any doubt, the 
			user was categorized as an adult.
 
 The researchers determined that out of the 681 retweeters for whom 
			an age could be proven or estimated, 171 were under 18, with 107 
			identified as "followers" of JUUL on Twitter. It's not clear whether 
			all these retweeters were actual users of the product, however.
 
 "Determining that is a next step for us," Chu said. "What they're 
			posting on social media doesn't mean they're using JUUL. We're just 
			looking at their exposure to the messages. We can't say if they had 
			an intention to buy it."
 
			
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			In a statement to Reuters Health, a JUUL Labs spokesperson said the 
			company has "taken numerous actions to prevent and combat underage 
			use, including focusing our website and social media exclusively on 
			the adult smoker community and removing all product-related content 
			from our social media accounts. . . we have also aggressively worked 
			with social media platforms to remove posts and accounts that 
			portray our product in unauthorized and youth-oriented manners."
 Still, the new findings "are in line with what we hear anecdotally 
			and what we observe in the world: youth are the ones being 
			influenced," said Dr. Michael Blaha, a researcher who specializes in 
			the epidemiology of e-cigarette use and its potential cardiovascular 
			toxicity and director of clinical research for the Johns Hopkins 
			Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease in Baltimore, 
			Maryland.
 
			"The JUUL comes in a smaller size so it's easier to conceal," Blaha 
			said. "It's got a 'cool' factor, between the skin colors and the 
			flavors. I've been told their (marketing) approach is more like the 
			Apple approach. And somehow they've made that simple connection with 
			kids."
 As a general rule, the vapors inhaled by e-cigarette users contain a 
			higher dose of nicotine than traditional cigarettes, Blaha said. 
			But, "I'm sure many kids don't view this as a tobacco product," he 
			added. "I encounter a lot of people in my research who don't think 
			it's a tobacco product. So they think smoking is bad, but vaping is 
			different."
 
 The marketing strategies JUUL is using "are definitely reminiscent 
			of the way tobacco companies used to target youth," said Dr. Luke 
			Benventuo, a transplant pulmonologist with the Center for Lung 
			Disease and Transplantation at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia 
			University Irving Medical Center in New York City. "I'm pretty 
			concerned."
 
 "The consequences of inhaling vapor is a huge unknown," Benventuo 
			said.
 
 Moreover, even if you're not getting all the carcinogens you get 
			with regular cigarettes, "you do get nicotine," Benventuo said. 
			"There are lots of studies that show nicotine is dangerous and toxic 
			to the adolescent brain."
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2JaRKta Journal of Adolescent Health, online 
			October 19, 2018.
 
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