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			 The use of e-cigarettes, which come in a wide variety of different 
			flavors, has become one of the fastest growing trends among the 
			tween and teen crowd, in large part because of the perception that 
			it’s harmless and safe. 
 However, that couldn’t be further from the truth, medical 
			professionals say. They said it’s imperative for parents to talk to 
			their children about the dangers of vaping.
 
 “It’s easily available and many children think it’s safe and just 
			flavored water vapor,” said Dr. Christopher Rivera, a family 
			medicine physician with Memorial Physician Services-Lincoln. “The 
			reality is that it’s a drug and addictive just like any tobacco 
			product.”
 
			
			 
			Vaping among teens has increased dramatically over the last several 
			years,” said Dr. Ngozi Ezike, director of the Illinois Department of 
			Public Health. “While the short- and long-term effects of vaping are 
			still being researched, these recent hospitalizations heighten the 
			need for parents to talk with their teens about vaping and for both 
			to understand the consequences and potential dangers of vaping.”
 Debbie Yeaman is a registered nurse and a registered respiratory 
			therapist at Memorial Medical Center in Springfield. She said any 
			inhaled substance, such as vaping, has the potential to irritate and 
			inflame the lung tissue, which could lead to the swelling of the 
			airways in the lungs due to the tightening of surrounding smooth 
			muscle tissue.
 
			
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“The long-term effects of vaping could cause hypersensitive reactions that not 
only constantly recur but also prove to be difficult to treat,” Yeaman said. 
“Our history of a perceived innocence of tobacco use and the overwhelming proof 
of that error in thinking should provide the wisdom we need to avoid inhaled 
substances of any kind.” 
Rivera pointed to targeted marketing tactics as a culprit in vaping’s growing 
popularity.
 “The industry is using the same tactics that were used by tobacco companies 
several decades ago,” Rivera said. “They are denying the possible health risks 
that can occur in using tobacco products.”
 
 Rivera agreed that smokeless tobacco contains fewer chemicals than cigarettes, 
but that doesn’t make it a safer habit.
 
 “It still contains several harmful chemicals such as formaldehyde, which is 
known to cause cancer,” he said. “The problem is this product has not been 
around very long, and we don’t know the long-term health risks associated with 
using e-cigarettes, and we won’t know for another 10 to 15 years.”
 
 Poison control centers have managed 2,439 exposure cases about e-cigarette 
devices and liquid nicotine as of July 31, according to the American Association 
of Poison Control Centers.
 
 The American Heart Association estimates that at least one in four teenagers is 
vaping from results of a 2015 survey of more than 15,000 teens nationwide.
 
				 
			[Michael Leathers] |