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			 "Hopefully it's more of a deterrent," said Michael Stevens, 
			superintendent of Channing Independent School District, about 50 
			miles northwest of Amarillo, referring to the new policy. "It's a 
			severe health problem." 
 Channing is not the only district getting stricter about vaping. 
			Another Texas school system has hired a resource officer to assist 
			with vaping prevention. Thousands of schools across the country are 
			installing sensors in bathrooms to catch offenders. One school in 
			Alabama has gone as far as to remove bathroom stall doors.
 
 The new measures follow the disturbing rise of a mysterious 
			respiratory illness that U.S. health officials have linked to 
			e-cigarette use. So far, six deaths have been reported by state or 
			federal officials.
 
 The American Medical Association on Monday urged Americans to stop 
			using electronic cigarettes and vape pens until scientists 
			understand the root cause of the respiratory illnesses.
 
			
			 
			
 In recent years, vaping has exploded in popularity among young 
			people and adults alike. More than 3 million U.S. high school 
			students used e-cigarettes in 2018, a 78% increase, according to the 
			U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
 
 Schools nationwide have banned e-cigarettes on school property in 
			the last few years. Disciplinary measures for student violators have 
			ranged from warnings to suspensions.
 
 But high schools and middle schools still struggle to stop students 
			from smoking e-cigarettes on their premises. Not only are they easy 
			to conceal, resembling USB flash drives, but they produce no smoke 
			and often emit no scent.
 
 With the recent deaths and illness, efforts to stop vaping on campus 
			have taken on new urgency, and schools are looking for fresh 
			approaches to tackle the problem.
 
 INSTALLING SENSORS, REMOVING DOORS
 
 The Channing district, which has about 170 students, tried to stem 
			vaping last year by requiring students to roll up their sleeves when 
			entering school in an attempt to prevent them from hiding 
			e-cigarettes.
 
 It also enforced in-school suspension for students who were caught 
			vaping. Now, offenders will have to attend the disciplinary school 
			for a month.
 
 In the first four weeks of the school year, no students in Channing 
			have been caught vaping and none have been sent to the disciplinary 
			school, which Stevens said is run by the school district "in an 
			isolated setting" about 30 miles away.
 
 He expected that will change. "I'm not naive enough to think they're 
			not sneaking around and trying it," Stevens said.
 
			
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			Hundreds of U.S. school districts have ordered vaping sensors for 
			bathrooms, according to IPVideoCorp, which launched one of the first 
			sensors on the market in April.
 David Antar, president of IPVideoCorp, said the number of weekly 
			requests for the sensors from school districts has in the last month 
			almost tripled to more than 200. Since April, the company has sold 
			sensors to schools in 46 states.
 
			"The demand for this, especially with school just starting, has gone 
			through the roof," Antar said.
 Wilson High School in Florence, Alabama has gone farther by removing 
			the doors from stalls in the boys' bathroom to prevent students from 
			vaping, local TV station WAFF 48 reported.
 
 Principal Gary Horton told the TV station that the rule went into 
			effect after a student was found unconscious on the bathroom floor 
			from excessive vaping.
 
 Administrators at Wilson High School did not respond to requests for 
			comment.
 
 E-cigarettes were introduced to the U.S. market 15 years ago as 
			safer alternatives to traditional cigarettes, which kill up to half 
			of all lifetime users, according to the World Health Organization. 
			Manufacturers, including the market leader Juul Labs, have claimed 
			that their target consumers are adults addicted to cigarettes.
 
 But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has condemned Juul for 
			advertising their products to youth in schools and falsely calling 
			them "totally safe" while the long-term health effects of 
			e-cigarettes are unknown.
 
 Gregory Conley, a spokesman for the American Vaping Association, 
			pointed out that the rise in teen vaping coincided with a decline in 
			youth cigarette use.
 
 “No youth should be experimenting with any adult substance, but we 
			don’t live in a perfect world. We make tradeoffs," said Conley. "We 
			recognize that one bad situation is better than a worse situation.”
 
 (Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Matthew Lavietes in New York; 
			Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
 
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