Special Report: Juul disregarded early evidence it was hooking teens
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[November 05, 2019]
By Chris Kirkham
(Reuters) - The San Francisco startup that
invented the groundbreaking Juul e-cigarette had a central goal during
its development: captivating users with the first hit.
The company had concluded that consumers had largely rejected earlier
e-cigarettes, former employees told Reuters, because the devices either
failed to deliver enough nicotine or delivered it with a harsh taste.
Developers of the Juul tackled both problems with a strategy they found
scouring old tobacco-company research and patents: adding organic acids
to nicotine, which allowed for a unique combination of smooth taste and
a potent dose.
Employees tested new liquid-nicotine formulations on themselves or on
strangers taking smoke breaks on the street. Sometimes, the mix packed
too much punch – enough nicotine to make some testers’ hands shake or
send them to the bathroom to vomit, a former company manager told
Reuters.
In the end, it worked. The formula delivered nicotine to the bloodstream
so efficiently, in fact, that the company’s engineers explored features
to stop users from ingesting too much of the drug, too quickly. Juul’s
founders applied for a patent in 2014 that described methods for
alerting the user or disabling the device when the dose of a drug such
as nicotine exceeds a certain threshold.
One idea was to shut down the device for a half-hour or more after a
certain number of puffs, said Chenyue Xing, a former Juul scientist who
helped patent its liquid-nicotine formula. The concern stemmed in part
from the fact that a Juul – unlike a cigarette – never burns out, Xing
said in an interview.
“You hope that they get what they want, and they stop,” she said. “We
didn’t want to introduce a new product with a stronger addictive power.”
The company never produced an e-cigarette that limited nicotine intake.
Xing was not directly involved in the engineering of the device and said
she didn’t know why the firm did not adopt a dosage-control feature.
Juul Labs Inc is now the central player in a broader controversy
sweeping the United States over the safety of its products along with
those of a wave of high-nicotine imitators. The rise of Juul sales
tracks closely with an epidemic of teenage nicotine use that has brought
a hail of criticism and regulatory scrutiny on the company.
Congressional investigators, state attorneys general and health
advocates have so far focused on whether Juul targeted young people
through its marketing and the dessert-like flavors of some Juul nicotine
liquids, such as creme brulee or mango.
https://graphics.reuters.com/JUUL-ECIGARETTES-FLAVORS/0100B2Z522C/juul-ecigarettes-flavors.jpg
But a Reuters investigation has found that, from the company’s earliest
days, insiders discussed and debated concerns over more fundamental
attributes of the product: its potency and addictiveness.
The breakthrough “nicotine salts” formula that made the Juul e-cigarette
so addictive – and ignited the company’s explosive market-share growth
made Juul especially attractive to teenagers and other new users who
otherwise would never have smoked cigarettes, according to interviews
with more than a dozen tobacco researchers, pediatricians, and a Reuters
review of Juul patents and independent research on nicotine chemistry.
https://graphics.reuters.com/JUUL-ECIGARETTES-MARKET/0100B2Z622E/juul-ecigarettes-market.jpg
The device delivers the drug more efficiently than a cigarette ,
according to emerging academic research into Juul’s formula and the
company’s own patent documents.
https://graphics.reuters.com/JUUL-ECIGARETTES-NICOTINE/0100B2Z822J/juul-ecigarettes-nicotine.jpg
In written answers to questions from Reuters, Juul said that it never
intended to attract underage customers. The company acknowledged it
needed to “earn back the trust of regulators, policymakers, key
stakeholders and society at large” in light of a surge in youth vaping
to “unacceptable” levels.
Juul declined to comment on why it never installed the features it
considered to limit nicotine intake. It said it designed its products to
mimic the experience of cigarettes because that was key to getting
smokers to buy them. Citing studies it commissioned, the company said
Juul users have far more success in quitting smoking than those who
tried earlier e-cigarettes.
The firm seldom mentioned nicotine in early consumer marketing, which
featured young, hip models and sold the product as a stylish alternative
to cigarettes. But the company’s sales force – tasked with convincing
reluctant retailers to give Juul shelf space – emphasized the device’s
unique addictive power by showing store owners charts depicting how the
Juul device delivers nicotine to the bloodstream as efficiently as a
traditional cigarette, said Vincent Latronica, who headed sales and
distribution for the company on the U.S. East Coast from 2014 until
early 2016. That argument became a central selling point, Latronica
said, allowing the young company to overcome retailer skepticism of
early e-cigarettes and to break into sales channels long dominated by
tobacco companies.
“Everyone wanted it,” Latronica said.
Juul did not answer questions from Reuters on why the company emphasized
the addictive qualities of its product to retailers and downplayed them
in advertisements to customers.
Inside the company, the first signs that Juul had a strong appeal to
young people came almost immediately after the sleek device went on sale
in 2015, according to the former company manager, who spoke on condition
of anonymity. Employees started fielding calls from teenagers asking
where they could buy more Juuls, along with the cartridge-like
disposable “pods” that contain the liquid nicotine.
The calls and other early signs of teenage use kicked off an internal
debate, the manager said in an interview. Some company leaders,
including founder James Monsees, argued for immediate action to curb
youth sales. Monsees served as chief executive and a company director at
the time. The counter-argument came from other company directors,
including healthcare entrepreneur Hoyoung Huh and other early investors,
the former manager said. They argued the company couldn’t be blamed for
youth nicotine addiction because it did not intentionally advertise or
sell to teens, said the manager, who had direct knowledge of the
internal discussions.
“Clearly, people internally had an issue with it,” the manager said,
referring to sales of Juuls to teenagers. “But a lot of people had no
problem with 500 percent year-over-year growth.”
Company leaders also clearly understood the long-term benefit of young
users on its bottom line, the manager said. It was well-known that young
customers were “the most profitable segment in the history of the
tobacco industry” because research shows that nicotine users who start
as teenagers are the most likely to become lifelong addicts.
In its written answers to Reuters, Juul said that Monsees “did not
recall” the internal debate in 2015 over whether to take action to stop
youth sales. Huh and other board members who served at the time of the
company’s product launch did not respond to requests for comment. Board
member Harold Handelsman declined to comment, citing pending lawsuits
against the company.
Juul declined to make Monsees or company co-founder Adam Bowen available
for interviews.
Following the product’s launch, it took nearly three years – and
pressure from regulators and U.S. senators – before Juul in April 2018
announced what it called a “comprehensive strategy” of measures to curb
youth sales. By that time, a leading U.S. government youth tobacco
survey showed that more than 3 million U.S. high school students – one
in five – had tried an e-cigarette in the prior month. More than a
quarter of those vaped at least 20 days a month. The latest available
data from the same survey, in September 2019, shows yet another
increase: More than one in four high schoolers – 27.5% – reported using
e-cigarettes in the previous month.
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The measures to prevent youth sales and use came two days after the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a nationwide crackdown on
underage sales of Juul products. The company committed $30 million for
youth prevention efforts, including distributing educational materials
to retailers and conducting research into technologies to prevent youth
sales.
Asked why the company did not act sooner, Juul noted two measures to
curb youth sales that it took half a year earlier, in August and
September of 2017: raising the minimum age for online purchases through
Juul’s website to 21 even though some states allow retail sales to
anyone over 18, and starting a “retail monitoring program.” The company
repeated that it now needs to earn back the public’s trust and said the
firm “reacted to the information that it had, and increased its youth
prevention measures as more data came out over the years.”
The former manager’s account of the early debate over young users
contradicts repeated statements from executives that the firm was caught
off-guard by teenage addiction beginning last year – “completely
surprised,” as Chief Administrative Officer Ashley Gould put it in a CNN
interview.
That narrative is further undermined by two prominent tobacco
researchers who told Reuters that they explicitly warned Juul’s founders
and a top company scientist about the potential for youth e-cigarette
abuse. Neal Benowitz at University of California-San Francisco, said he
told Gal Cohen, the company’s director of scientific affairs, that
widespread teen use could wreck the company’s business.
“Look, the one thing you have to do is make sure that this doesn’t get
into the hands of young people,” Benowitz recalled telling Cohen about a
year after the product launch. “If it spreads among kids, this product
could be dead.”
Juul declined to comment on whether tobacco researchers warned company
leaders about youth e-cigarette addiction. Cohen and Gould did not
respond to requests for comment.
This inside account of Juul’s early inaction on youth addiction comes as
the company faces mounting pressure from regulators. CEO Kevin Burns
departed in September after a dizzying series of bad headlines for Juul
and the industry: an outbreak of mysterious lung illnesses tied to
vaping; an FDA warning about the company’s unauthorized health claims;
and a proposed Trump administration ban on all e-cigarette flavors
except those mimicking natural tobacco. Juul last month voluntarily
halted online sales of flavors such as mango and fruit in the United
States after earlier pulling them from retail stores. The company still
sells the controversial flavors in many other markets globally.
The firestorm around Juul also led to the abandonment of merger talks
between Philip Morris International Inc and Altria Group Inc, which has
a 35% stake in Juul after a $12.8 billion investment last year. Altria
last week had to write down that investment by $4.5 billion, citing the
regulatory risks.
Altria declined to comment for this story, noting that it purchased its
stake about a year ago, well after Juul developed its products.
Several state attorneys general and a U.S. congressional oversight
committee are also investigating whether Juul marketed its products to
underage users. Monsees and other company leaders have said they regret
some of the company’s early marketing but maintain it targeted customers
in their mid-20s to early 30s.
As youth e-cigarette use continues to rise – after a long decline in
teenage cigarette smoking – doctors, scientists and researchers are
grappling with how to treat nicotine addiction among teenagers. Emerging
research suggests serious risks to the developing adolescent brain.
The combination of a “very, very addictive” product and a developing
brain has dangerous implications, said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, a
professor of pediatrics at Stanford University’s medical school. “Rather
than your brain getting pleasure from exercising or relationships, your
brain becomes rewired to get pleasure from nicotine,” she said.
Juul did not comment on the research into how e-cigarettes harm
teenagers. It said it has launched a “robust scientific program to
assess the harm-reduction potential of Juul products, including their
impact on the individual user” as part of a larger effort to comply with
FDA regulations.
For William Smith, a high school senior in Newburyport, Mass., Juul
became an obsession that occupied most of his waking hours, leading to
near-failing grades and wild mood swings. He first tried it in the
summer of 2017 while playing video games at a friend’s house and soon
couldn’t shake the craving. A year later, he was vaping a pod or more
every day – an amount of nicotine equivalent to a pack of 20 cigarettes.
“It honestly controlled me,” Smith said. “It’s almost like I was going
insane.”
TAPPING CIGARETTE-INDUSTRY RESEARCH
One late night in 2004, company founders Monsees and Bowen were
brainstorming for their master’s thesis in product design at Stanford
University. They went to smoke cigarettes outside the design school
studio, as they often did, and started questioning how such a successful
yet low-tech consumer product - a burning stick of plant material -
could have changed so little over time, according to the origin story
the founders have told in speeches, interviews and promotional videos.
There must be a better, less harmful way to smoke, they figured, so they
focused their thesis on creating a new kind of cigarette. Monsees and
Bowen went on to start the company Ploom Inc, which was renamed Pax Labs
Inc and later became Juul Labs Inc.
The Bay Area is a hotbed of tobacco-industry research, both at Stanford
and the University of California-San Francisco. UCSF houses a trove of
internal tobacco-industry documents made public as part of a 1998
settlement between the largest U.S. cigarette manufacturers and 46 state
attorneys general.
Public health advocates and researchers called the mandated release of
millions of formerly secret tobacco-industry documents among the most
impactful public-service legacies of the settlement. The records
unmasked the companies’ marketing tactics and informed research globally
into the dangers of cigarettes. They are credited with laying the
groundwork for the first global treaty on tobacco regulation.
Juul’s creators found another use for the records: product development.
Monsees and Bowen started digging into those documents for their thesis
research, an endeavor that would continue over the next decade as they
drew on knowledge from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co and others who had spent
decades and billions of dollars searching for the optimal balance of
flavor and addictive power.
During their thesis presentation in 2005, Monsees and Bowen showed a
familiarity with research into “safer” cigarettes that tobacco companies
had tried, with little success, to develop and sell in the 1980s. Those
efforts, however, gave Juul a critical base of research.
“We had so much information that you wouldn’t normally be able to get in
most industries,” Monsees said during a 2015 interview with
entertainment website Social Underground. That allowed the company, he
said, to catch up to a “huge, huge industry in no time.”
They also visited experts in the history of cigarettes and addiction,
seeking endorsements for their early concepts. One of them, UCSF’s
Stanton Glantz, wrote a book drawing extensively on the tobacco
documents made public after the 1998 settlement.
Glantz recalled a meeting about a decade ago at which Bowen and Monsees
told him they aimed to fight back against “the tobacco epidemic.” He
said he warned them that e-cigarette popularity among young people was a
big risk, citing the long history of teen addiction to cigarettes.
“What they told me was they didn’t think that was a problem,” Glantz
said, “because they weren’t designing this as a product for kids.”
Juul declined to comment on whether Glantz and other researchers warned
the company about the danger of addicting teenagers.
In 2010, Monsees and Bowen started selling their first vaping device,
the Ploom. It was shaped like a pen and at first used butane to heat
metal cylinders filled with tobacco.
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An image shows 2015 advertising for Juul products displayed in a
print magazine, in this screenshot taken by Reuters from Stanford
University's archive of tobacco advertising.
It wasn’t particularly effective at delivering nicotine, said Kurt
Sonderegger, one of the first marketing employees at the fledgling
company. But it drew interest from Japan Tobacco International, one of
the world’s largest cigarette makers, which made an early investment.
In 2012, the founders introduced a line of vaporizers called Pax.
They were designed to heat up loose-leaf tobacco but instead became
enormously popular as discreet devices for using cannabis. Sleek and
fashionable, the Pax products were a hit, but were also expensive,
running $200 or more.
Pax’s popularity with pot smokers helped put the company on the map
with consumers, retailers and investors while it continued working
on the larger goal of competing with tobacco cigarettes. Pax became
“really a play to make money in the shorter term, to fuel their next
ambitions” with what would become the Juul device, the former
manager said. Latronica, the East Coast sales chief, recalled: “We
always knew we had this game-changer in the background.”
FOCUS ON THE FIRST HIT
Monsees and Bowen continued to mine the tobacco industry documents
in the years leading up to Juul’s 2015 launch. At the time,
e-cigarettes had been available in the U.S. market for a few years
but hadn’t gained much traction. They used a type of liquid nicotine
then sold by wholesalers called freebase nicotine, which had a
caustic taste if used at concentrations high enough to mimic a
cigarette.
The founders hired engineers and scientists drawn from places
including Stanford and pharmaceutical companies. Among them was
Xing, a research scientist who had previously worked to develop
inhalable drugs for conditions such as asthma and migraine
headaches. She was intrigued by the opportunity to take a product
quickly to market, avoiding years-long regulatory drug-approval
processes.
When she joined in 2013, Xing said, Bowen and others at the company
were experimenting with the chemical properties of nicotine. They
drew on tobacco research from companies such as R.J. Reynolds, which
had experimented with nicotine’s chemistry in the 1980s to create a
smoother “light” cigarette with less tar, Xing said. Tar is a
chemical substance left behind by burning tobacco, and it contains
most of the carcinogenic compounds in cigarette smoke.
“We had consultants who were veterans of the big tobacco companies,”
said Xing, who recalled poring over tobacco company records and
research. “We learned all the history.”
Xing and others started to research the smoother type of nicotine
that naturally occurred in the tobacco plant, known as “nicotine
salts” or “protonated nicotine.” This form of the drug was
highlighted in a cache of documents from R.J. Reynolds in the 1980s
as part of an experiment called “Project XGT.”
R.J. Reynolds aimed to make the nicotine in low-tar “light”
cigarettes more palatable to smokers. The company showed that adding
organic acids to cigarettes could neutralize nicotine’s bitter taste
by reducing its pH, or acid-base scale, while also delivering more
nicotine. The addition would please customers wanting “a cigarette
that is smooth, mild, highest quality, and very refreshing,”
according to the R.J. Reynolds documents. The records do not make
clear whether or how the company used the research in its
cigarettes.
The use of acids to reduce harshness was “a key,” Xing said. “It was
an avenue we could try to go down.”
When Juul’s predecessor company in 2014 filed patent documents
describing its nicotine salts formula, it referenced the R.J.
Reynolds patent on using acids as a cigarette additive.
Xing and others tested different kinds of acids to create a nicotine
liquid with the optimal blend of smoothness and potency. They
ultimately settled on benzoic acid after a series of blind trials.
Juul, in its statement to Reuters, said that the development of its
nicotine salts formula “did not directly stem from a review of
tobacco industry documents.”
The company acknowledged it consulted R.J. Reynolds research, along
with a “variety of published sources,” but said it discovered
through its own experimentation that adding organic acids to liquid
nicotine resulted in more efficient delivery of the drug.
Xing said the goal was to provide “a similar level of kick and
satisfaction” as a cigarette. Blending benzoic acid, a common food
preservative, into e-cigarette nicotine liquids provided another
advantage: a more direct path to the lungs, in which the stimulant
is then propelled to the brain through the bloodstream. The freebase
nicotine in earlier e-cigarettes was more easily absorbed in a
user’s mouth and throat, a much slower path to the brain, nicotine
researchers have found. That means the freebase formulation “never
delivers the head buzz or kick,” Xing said.
The company’s goal was to deliver instant satisfaction to skeptical
users, said the former manager. Surveys at the time showed that more
than half of cigarette smokers had tried e-cigarettes but less than
10% became regular users.
That’s why the first hit was so crucial, the former manager said.
“We knew there might be a second or third draw, but not
necessarily,” the person said.
Xing left Pax Labs in 2016 and has since started her own e-cigarette
company in China called Myst Labs. She said she was surprised at how
many teenagers gravitated toward Juul. She said her new company
takes care to avoid appealing to young people and welcomes tougher
regulations to prevent youth sales.
“We are targeting mature male users,” she said. “We didn’t want to
get into similar trouble with the teenagers.”
PITCHING ADDICTION TO RETAILERS
In the leadup to Juul’s launch, the breakthrough nicotine blend was
crucial to convincing distributors and convenience stores to carry
their products. Many large retail chains had been burned by earlier
e-cigarettes, which sat unsold on shelves.
“It was very, very difficult to get into doors with e-cigarettes,
because a lot of these e-cigarettes were inferior products,” said
Latronica, the former East Coast sales chief. The retailers, he
said, “were sitting on thousands and thousands of dollars of
product.”
Latronica said he started showing owners of vape shops and bodegas
in New York City the chart comparing Juul to cigarettes as a way to
assure them of repeat business. The chart plotted a line resembling
a hockey stick, showing a rapid boost of nicotine to the bloodstream
in less than five minutes.
Juul’s patent contains a chart showing how its nicotine salts
formula can deliver more nicotine to the bloodstream than a Pall
Mall cigarette. In its statement to Reuters, Juul now says its
product delivers slightly less nicotine than a cigarette.
To reassure retailers after the 2015 product launch, Juul offered to
buy back any unsold devices, Latronica said. It also pitched
retailers on profit margins of 36% on Juul pods, the cartridges of
nicotine juice it makes, he said, more than three times what stores
were netting on cigarettes. Juul pods also carried taxes that were
$3.50 less than the levy on comparable cigarette products, making
them generally more affordable, according to a document produced by
a Juul investor.
“We were relentless,” Latronica said of the sales teams’ efforts to
reach out to every possible retailer.
A pack of four Juul pods costs about $16, with each pod carrying the
nicotine equivalent of a pack of 20 cigarettes. The price of a pack
of cigarettes in most states is between $6 and $9, but more than $11
in states such as New York and Illinois.
The pressure to ramp up sales got more intense when the company
announced a major investment right after the product launch,
according to another former manager at Juul’s predecessor company.
The company announced a $46.7 million funding round that included
investments from stalwarts like Fidelity Investments and Tao Capital
Partners, a fund run by former Hyatt hotels chain executive Nicholas
Pritzker, who served on the e-cigarette startup’s board of directors
and remains in that role today. That investment round came in far
higher than the amount anticipated by the company, the former
manager said, creating immense pressure for swift growth.
Adding more pressure, Juul’s first year was plagued by production
backlogs. Former sales employees recalled the company often couldn’t
keep up with orders because of faulty devices or leaking nicotine
pods.
Early advertising around Juul featured fluorescent colors and young
models. Customers were urged to “share a #Juulmoment” and revel in
its iPhone-like design with mottos such as “Simple. Smart.
Satisfying.”
The early advertising and social media campaigns eventually spawned
an avalanche of user-generated content on Instagram and Twitter,
with young people posting photos of themselves using the devices,
often under hashtags such as #doit4juul or #juullife. Some teenagers
posted YouTube videos of themselves reviewing the device or its pod
flavors or performing stunts such as smoking multiple Juuls at once.
After regulators cracked down on the company in April 2018, Juul
asked social media networks to take down any content promoting youth
use of its products. Last fall, the company ended its own social
media marketing efforts.
MORE NICOTINE THAN A MARLBORO
In 15 puffs, a Juul emits about 15% more nicotine than a Marlboro
Red cigarette, according to research from the American University of
Beirut. Researchers at Portland State University will soon release
research into the chemistry of Juul’s nicotine blend that finds it
is an almost exact match for the addictiveness and ease of
inhalation found in a Marlboro, James F. Pankow, a chemistry and
engineering professor at the school, told Reuters.
The Portland State researchers found that Juul’s addition of benzoic
acid smoothed out the harshness common in earlier e-cigarettes while
retaining the “kick” that smokers loved in a Marlboro. The
researchers noted that Juul had rapidly duplicated - and improved -
a formula that it took tobacco growers and purveyors centuries to
perfect.
“If you think Marlboros are bad because they’re addictive, then this
is like a Marlboro on steroids,” said Pankow, who has long studied
the chemistry of nicotine and tobacco smoke. “You’re taking away the
smell; you’re putting it in a more discreet and sexy package; you’re
not lighting it on fire. It has all of the positive points and it
takes away a lot of the negative points.”
Cigarettes also deliver nicotine efficiently to the lungs, the most
direct path to the brain, research shows. But some of the smoke is
absorbed into the mouth and throat, giving users a so-called throat
hit that’s pleasurable but also harsh enough to slow the intake of
smoke and nicotine. Unlike a cigarette, a Juul delivers “high doses
of nicotine without it hurting the mouth and throat” at the moment
when a user inhales, said Ted Wagener, a tobacco researcher at Ohio
State University.
Juul’s patent documents highlight that its nicotine aerosol “is more
readily delivered to the user’s lung,” as opposed to the mouth or
throat, where nicotine would absorb more slowly, with a “less
satisfying effect.”
YOUR BRAIN ON JUUL
Addiction can set in quickly among young vapers. Susanne Tanski, a
pediatrician and former chair of the tobacco consortium at the
American Academy of Pediatrics, said she and colleagues are
observing first-time Juul users becoming addicted within two months,
compared to two years or more for a smoker to become dependent on
cigarettes.
Young Juulers may also be taking in more nicotine than young
smokers, according to a study last year by scientists at the Roswell
Park Comprehensive Cancer Center and Stony Brook University in New
York. They found that the levels of a nicotine indicator in the
urine of young regular users of Juul or similar e-cigarettes was
nearly 60% higher than that of regular cigarette smokers of the same
age.
Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General
Hospital surveyed more than 1,600 high school students in the Boston
area and found that 58% of those who had ever tried Juul or similar
high-nicotine devices continued to use them, compared to just 17% of
teenagers who had ever tried cigarettes.
“The person who is becoming addicted to cigarettes has to be more
determined; they almost have to want to become a smoker,” said Dr.
Jonathan Winickoff, a pediatrician at MassGeneral Hospital for
Children in Boston, who was involved in the survey. “With Juul, you
get trapped much more easily. There’s nothing about it that’s
telling your body that it’s harmful.”
There’s a surprising lack of long-term research on nicotine’s health
effects, mostly because other toxins in cigarettes, which cause
cancer, have always been the primary concern. But emerging studies
suggest serious harmful effects on the developing brains of
teenagers.
Throughout childhood and into the mid-20s, the human brain is in
constant flux, forming new neural pathways that govern how people
learn, control impulses and form emotions. Early exposure to
nicotine hijacks that process, studies suggest, training the young
mind to fixate on acquiring nicotine instead of forming connections
that control mood disorders and impulsive behavior. This
interruption has a particular impact on parts of the brain that
control risk-taking, one reason why nicotine addiction is correlated
with later use of drugs such as cocaine.
Beyond nicotine, other compounds in e-cigarette aerosols have been
shown to increase the risk of heart attacks and lung disorders.
There’s little long-term clinical research on exposure to
e-cigarettes, however, because the products are so new. That
research gap has frustrated efforts to pinpoint a root cause of more
than 1,800 cases of severe lung illnesses tied to vaping in recent
months in the United States.
E-cigarette enthusiasts and some researchers point to studies
showing far fewer carcinogenic compounds in e-cigarettes than
traditional cigarettes, which result in preventable fatal diseases
in up to half of all lifetime users, according to the World Health
Organization. The U.K. Royal College of Physicians, for example, has
concluded that e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful than traditional
cigarettes, citing a reduction in the risk of serious disease and
death.
For Smith, the Massachusetts high school senior, a hit of a Juul was
at first “relaxing and soothing” – until it wasn’t. Last school
year, he often took multiple bathroom breaks during class to sneak
vape hits.
“The second you’re done hitting it, you want to use it again,” he
said.
Taking tests and completing homework became difficult because the
urge for a Juul hit interfered with his focus, he said. His grades
slipped: He nearly failed his second year of algebra after earning
an “A” the year before.
William’s father, Christopher Smith, said it seemed like “no time at
all” between first finding his son’s nicotine stash and the family’s
decision to seek help.
Since March, Smith has been seeing Winickoff, the Mass General
pediatrician, in an attempt to shake his Juul habit. He’s planning
to take off a year between high school and college, in part to
restore his ability to concentrate.
“It’s hard to sum up,” he said. “It’s something that’s made my life
worse, made my life terrible. I wish I had never started it.”
Smith wears a prescription nicotine patch 24 hours a day and carries
nicotine gum as a supplement.
And he still sometimes hits a Juul: “Occasionally, I do give in.”
(Reporting by Chris Kirkham; Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Brian
Thevenot)
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