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			 Attorney General Raoul is urging Illinoisans to avoid using 
			e-cigarette or vape products after nationwide reports of users being 
			hospitalized. Since June, approximately 300 residents of 23 states 
			have been hospitalized after experiencing severe respiratory 
			problems and other worsening symptoms after using e-cigarette or 
			vape products. According to the Illinois Department of Public Health 
			(IDPH), 27 cases have been reported in Chicago and Champaign, as 
			well as Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, Madison, McHenry, 
			Peoria, St. Clair, Tazewell, Will, and Winnebago counties. Cases 
			involve individuals between the ages of 17 and 38 and have resulted 
			in one fatality. 
 
			
			 
			“E-cigarettes are appealing to consumers for a number of reasons, 
			including the mistaken belief that e-cigarettes are somehow safer 
			than other tobacco products,” Raoul said. “As people around the 
			country report being hospitalized after using e-cigarettes or vape 
			pens, and with one fatality already in the state of Illinois, it is 
			clear that vaping products pose a significant health risk and should 
			be avoided.”
 
 According to Raoul, symptoms experienced by individuals who have 
			become ill range from difficulty breathing, coughing and fatigue, to 
			vomiting and diarrhea. People who have been hospitalized reported 
			that their symptoms worsened in the days or weeks after using 
			e-cigarettes or vape products. Raoul encourages anyone experiencing 
			such symptoms after using e-cigarette products – even if symptoms do 
			not take place instantaneously – to seek immediate medical 
			attention.
 
			The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported 
			that many patients, including some in Illinois, reported vaping 
			products containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) before experiencing 
			symptoms. Although the reported illnesses have not been linked to 
			any particular e-cigarette or vape product, no e-cigarette or vape 
			product has been conclusively eliminated as a potential source of 
			the illnesses.  
			
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According to the IDPH, the aerosol created by e-cigarettes can contain harmful 
ingredients. The Food and Drug Administration has also reported that some people 
who use e-cigarettes – primarily youth and young adults – have experienced 
seizures, which are a potential side effect of nicotine toxicity.
 The Illinois Attorney General’s office has long fought to decrease the use of 
tobacco and nicotine products, particularly by young people. In June 2018, the 
Attorney General’s office asked the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban 
flavored tobacco products. In May, Attorney General Raoul urged the FDA to 
strengthen e-cigarette guidance by prioritizing enforcement actions against 
flavored e-cigarettes. Earlier this month, the Attorney General and a coalition 
of attorneys general urged the streaming video industry to adopt policies to 
protect young viewers from often glamorized tobacco content.
 
 Currently, the Attorney General’s office is investigating one of the nation’s 
leading e-cigarette companies, Juul Labs, for possible violations of Illinois’ 
consumer protection laws. According to the Wall Street Journal, Juul sold more 
than 12 million devices and 390 refill pods in the U.S. during just the first 
half of 2019. While the Attorney General’s investigation into Juul’s marketing 
practices is ongoing, the office is also evaluating the possibility of 
investigating additional e-cigarette companies.
 
 Attorney General Raoul is encouraging Illinoisans who became ill after using 
e-cigarettes or vape products to file complaints on his website or by calling 
one of Raoul’s Consumer Fraud Hotlines: 1-800-386-5438, Chicago; 1-800-243-0618, 
Springfield; or 1-800-243-0607, Carbondale.
 
 For more information and free resources to help quit tobacco, please visit the 
Illinois Tobacco Quitline website or call 1-866-QUIT-YES.
 
				 
			[Office of the Attorney General Kwame 
			Raoul] |