I don't think kids should vape. I don't think vaping is 100% harmless. I don't vape or smoke. I also think that there is some contingent of people who are excessively worried about vaping and looking for problems that don't seem to exist. It doesn't help that there is conflation between cannabis and e cigs, and that (based on best evidence right now) the fake cannabis liquid is causing the handful severe lung infections.
I don't mind more regulation here, absolutely make sure it's safe and find a set of ingredients that cause the least amount of harm to humans. Why is vaping perceived as so dangerous? Compared with cigarettes its damn near harmless. I don't get it.
"Compared with cigarettes its damn near harmless."
Maybe. Maybe it is. Maybe it is not. We don't know what the long term effects will be, and conducting a real time trial on 20% of the nations high-schoolers isn't the optimal way to find out.
Odd how no one says that about produce that has had bacteria genes spliced in to it and is now fed to hundreds of millions of people. We won't even label it.
I think it's more that Juul pods have a very high level of nicotine and are creating a new generation of addicts. Even if they don't end up dying of cancer, this is still potentially millions of lifetimes of addiction for society to bear over the next 20-50 years.
My opinion: keep the nicotine for tobacco-flavored pods as a smoking cessation tool; otherwise drop the nicotine and go for a La Croix-style strategy.
Yes, if Juul had really wanted to position itself as a responsible actor they would offer further step-down nicotine levels, 2% and 1%, to better assist in quitting. I'd love it if a few lawsuits could get internal discussion surrounding those conversations.
Being addicted to nicotine isn't really a problem, it doesn't give you cancer or other diseases. The problem is all the other unpleasant things in cigarette smoke.
"Nicotine causes catecholamine release both locally and systemically leading to an increase in heart rate, blood pressure and cardiac contractility. It reduces blood flow in cutaneous and coronary vessels; and increases blood flow in the skeletal muscles. Due to restricted myocardial oxygen delivery there is reduced cardiac work. In a study, chewing a low dose (4 mg) of nicotine gum by healthy nonsmokers blunted the increase in coronary blood flow that occurs with increased heart rate produced by cardiac pacing. Thus, persistent stimulation by nicotine can contribute to Coronary Vascular Disease by producing acute myocardial ischemia. In the presence of coronary disease, myocardial dysfunction can be worsened."
"Nicotine alters the structural and functional characteristics of vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells. It enhances release of the basic fibroblast growth factor and inhibits production of transforming growth factor-β1. These effects lead to increased DNA synthesis, mitogenic activity, endothelial proliferation and increases atherosclerotic plaque formation. Neovascularization stimulated by nicotine can help progression of atherosclerotic plaques. These effects lead to myointimal thickening and atherogenic and ischemic changes, increasing the incidence of hypertension and cardiovascular disorders."
"Nicotine plays a role in the development of emphysema in smokers, by decreasing elastin in the lung parenchyma and increasing the alveolar volume."
"The simultaneous effect of bronchoconstriction and apnea increases the tracheal tension and causes several respiratory disorders."
"Nicotine use has been associated with Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD) and peptic ulcer disease (PUD)."
"Nicotine has been known to be immunosuppressive through central and peripheral mechanisms. It impairs antigen and receptor mediated signal transduction in the lymphoid system leading to decreased immunological response."
"Nicotine promotes pathologic angiogenesis and retinal neovascularization in murine models. It causes age-related macular degeneration in mice."
"There is synergistic relationship between nicotine and glucose metabolism which increases the risk of diabetes mellitus. This might cause accelerated cataract formation."
"Nitrous oxide liberated from parasympathetico-nergic nerves plays a pivotal role in generating immediate penile vasodilatation and corpus cavernosum relaxation, and NO derived from endothelial cells contributes to maintaining penile erection. Nicotine causes impairment of NO synthesis. This may lead to loss of penile erections and erectile dysfunction."
"Nicotine affects the ovaries and alters the production of oocytes in various animal studies. Nicotine-treated oocytes appeared nonspherical with rough surface and torn and irregular zona-pellucida. Nicotine also caused disturbed oocyte maturation. There is a decreased blood flow to the oviducts and thus impaired fertilization."
"Various animal studies show retarded fetal growth and lower birth weight when treated perinatally with nicotine. The lower levels of ACTH and cortisol due to nicotine are probable reasons for the incidence of lower birth weight in the newborns."
"Nicotine adversely affects many organs as shown in human and animal studies. Its biological effects are widespread and extend to all systems of the body including cardiovascular, respiratory, renal and reproductive systems. Nicotine has also been found to be carcinogenic in several studies. It promotes tumorigenesis by affecting cell proliferation, angiogenesis and apoptotic pathways. It causes resistance to the chemotherapeutic agents."
I'm not highly convinced here. While I only fast-read the paper you linked and checked out few references, I found cases of the usual (unintentional or not) confusion between nicotine and tobacco, or where the study population was that of smokers.
It's not controversial to say smoking is bad for you. But that's always been not because of nicotine, but all the other substances you inhale when smoking, some of which are known to interact with nicotine. What's controversial is whether nicotine itself is bad for you, in isolation, and it's of interest to people taking it in the form of chewing gums, or more recently, vaping.
Here's Gwern with a bunch of papers arguing that nicotine isn't more addictive than coffee and doesn't cause cancer, and the whole thing is just confusion: https://www.gwern.net/Nicotine#addictiveness.
I'm not sure we can say it's damn near harmless at this point. It hasn't been around long enough to measure the really long-term health impacts, especially considering there are chemicals present in vaping that aren't in traditional cigarettes. They've only seen wide use for a little more than 10 years. Do we really know what propylene glycol will do to lungs or bodies over decades? There are also some harmful chemicals that are actually higher in e-cigs [0]
In short, while available research points towards these things being safer, we really don't know what that margin is. Even if it's, say, 10 times safer, if vaping explodes to more than 10x the current smoking population then net harm could still be increased. Or not! But that's my point: we really don't know.
Personally, I don't think they should be outlawed. I think fruit flavors should be banned just like they are in cigarettes, and I think anti-smoking education campaigns need to ramp up their message to include vaping as a "no, just don't ever even start" part of the effort, and e-cigs should be required to only be marketed as aids for quitting smoking.
> I'm not sure we can say it's damn near harmless at this point.
Compared to what? Harm isn't measured in a vacuum. In the comparisons that make sense (e.g. vaping vs smoking american cigarettes) vaping is in fact damn near harmless in comparison, even if harmless is not the term I'd use for a vasodilator as potent as nicotine.
All of these "well we don't know vaping is harmless" monologues are coming from bad faith where you compare it to breathing "air" or something. Even that comparison doesn't really work because city air can itself be on the order of harm of a smoking habit—wouldn't it be funny if simply existing in SF turned out worse for your lung health than vaping?
So... of course we don't know what the harm of these things are, but we do know the harm of cigarette smoking, a factor that seems repeatedly absent from calls for regulations of vaping. Why aren't people banning cigarettes?
Of course it's relative. I'm comparing. Being relative is both implicit and synonymous with comparing rates of harm between two things. But you simply can't definitively say something is damn near harmless relative to cigarettes when you don't actually know what harm it causes, and nothing you've said changes that we don't know what harm it causes. Available evidence strongly points towards not being nearly as harmful, but that's at a relatively short term time scale.
I also don't see how comparing vaping to not vaping is a bad faith argument. If smoking causes lung cancer at 13 to 23 times the rate as not smoking, it would seem important to compare vaping's rate to both of these, along with any other health effects. It's one (albeit imperfect) baseline. Sometimes, as in the case of living in a polluted city, the baseline varies and should be controlled for in studies. You yourself emphasized relative harm. So comparing harm of doing something to that of not doing it is exactly what you would want in order to get that relative relationship.
More on pollution-- maybe living with air pollution is worse than vaping, but then living that way and vaping would be worse still. Again, there's that relative harm again. These studies have been done with traditional cigarettes, showing living in pollution increased lung disease but smoking then increases it even more, again all relative (in most studies) to "never smokers". An important piece of research to find out for vaping as well.
Finally you put a straw man up against my arguments when you talk about banning hypocrisy: I don't advocate banning it, and you're right that it seems a silly conversation to talk about banning vaping if you're not thinking about the same for cigarettes. For my part, I generally want vaping to be treated on par with cigarettes, excepting I think it should be marketed as a quitting method, not an alternate life-long choice.
>But you simply can't definitively say something is damn near harmless relative to cigarettes when you don't actually know what harm it causes
I totally get where you're coming from and am sympathetic to this argument, but I don't agree with it. We have learned a great deal from decades of research in to the harms of cigarette smoking, and have drawn some uncontroversial conclusions about why smoking causes so many health problems. We also can be reasonably sure that vaporizing nicotine does not create those same harmful conditions. I'm not saying anyone knows the long term implications of vaping, but "no one knows what will happen" is not a strong argument to me. As it stands, I think we have every reason to believe that smoking cigarettes is drastically more harmful than vaping.
The delivery mechanism is certainly an issue here. Food additives are tested for how safe they are to ingest, and they are not tested for how safe they are to inhale. In general we know that there are a lot of compounds safe to ingest which are not safe to inhale.
Just to pick an obviously stupid example, I could chug a can of soda (or seltzer, if you prefer) in one go. It would contain around 2.2g of CO2. If you put that 2.2g of CO2 in my lungs, I would be dead. (Well, you would have to keep it there. It would at least be very painful.)
Or to pick another obviously stupid example, I could drink enough alcohol to kill myself. In most situations, I would vomit or pass out before I got to the fatal dose. But instead, I could give myself an alcohol enema and just die (which does happen, from time to time). So, delivery matters absolutely.
For the non-obvious examples we (at least) need data. If you are putting “high” concentrations of a chemical (for some appropriate definition of “high”) in your lungs you will want some good safety data. For ingestion we already have an FDA approval process. You may disagree with the methodology, but at least it’s there.
No. With alcohol we want to encourage responsible use, so a kid having a wine cooler seems okay. With cigarettes we basically want elimination so a kid taking a puff off a 'unicorn cake' vape seems bad.
I don't know. I don't know if there's any research about flavored alcohol appealing primarily to under-age drinkers the way flavored cigarettes were linked to underage cigarette use. Also there are levels of regular drinking that have neither definitive long term health consequences or the capacity for rapid addiction. Direct comparisons aren't really applicable, at least not without taking those vast differences into account.
I think it's pretty solidly established that an alcohol addiction is drastically more harmful than a nicotine addiction -- keeping in mind that we're talking about vaporized nicotine, not cigarettes.
Your point about certain populations of drinkers being able to indulge without obvious adverse health outcomes is also applicable to users of vaporized nicotine. And again it is worth pointing out that alcohol is significantly more harmful than nicotine.
I would be curious to see any research that supports the idea that flavored vape products are primarily appealing to underage users. I suspect there aren't many teenagers opting for scotch as their drink of choice, but I am certain there are plenty of adults who prefer a rum punch, peach white claw, jameson and ginger ale, or a glass of wine (it's made from grape juice for god's sake, brazenly targeting the children!), etc.
"Nicotine poses several health hazards. There is an increased risk of cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal disorders. There is decreased immune response and it also poses ill impacts on the reproductive health. It affects the cell proliferation, oxidative stress, apoptosis, DNA mutation by various mechanisms which leads to cancer. It also affects the tumor proliferation and metastasis and causes resistance to chemo and radio therapeutic agents. "
"Nicotine is one of the most addicting agent (sic). The US surgeon general (2010) has concluded nicotine to be as addictive as cocaine or heroin."
Is this really true? The last time I looked carefully into this claim, I found that pretty much everyone conflates nicotine and tobacco, and that the precious few studies on nicotine showed minimal addictiveness. E.g.:
"However, substantial evidence exists to suggest that nicotine's reinforcing effects alone are not sufficient to account for the intense addictive properties of tobacco smoking ..."[1]
If anyone has further references, that would be great.
There are also known health benefits of nicotine [2][3]. Probably, just like for every other drug, we need to better understand the risk vs reward tradeoffs.
<sample_size=1>I am 100% addicted to nicotine. I have managed to quit drinking alcohol from a 1L/day vodka habit. I switched to vape years ago, haven't smoked a cigarette in years, and have been cutting down the mg/ml level of nicotine in my vape for months now. Once I go below 6mg/ml I start to get very very unhappy, and if I switch to 0mg, I start having symptoms I recall very well from detoxing from booze.</sample_size=1>
I am totally fine with people drinking flavored water on a sidewalk. I am not okay with people intentionally emitting clouds of flavored, aerosolized, pyrolized clouds of random chemicals on the sidewalk. I don’t want to breathe secondary smoke or vaping byproducts.
I also have a problem with highly polluting motorcycles, old or unmaintained cars, and gasoline-powered leaf blowers. I can’t even imagine how bad cities mu have smelled in the 60’s or 70’s.
(This is a separate issue from CO2. Motorcycles are not major CO2 emitters, but they are often vastly worse in terms of toxic and stinky pollutants than modern gas-guzzling trucks.)
Juul got billions from Altria, parent company of Philip Morris which makes things like Malboro. Doesn't make sense for a tobacco giant to lobby against itself, unless it was a competitor lobbying specifically against PM/Altria.
It does! A pack of cigarettes is about $0.06 to manufacture. A world of heavily regulated guaranteed profits is better than a world where you are subject to technology disruption. Juul could easily be replaced by some better tech, which almost certainly wouldn't come from Altria.
I absolutely believe the cigarette companies are behind some part of the current PR kill-job on ecigs. They simply benefit the most.
That could be true, yeah. boourns311's comment also helped me understand the viewpoint a little better. I'd be a little surprised if they were investing in Juul while also trying to sweep it away, but it's the tobacco industry. They're always doing anything they can to keep themselves afloat.
Smokeless tobacco is more widely used than cigarettes, and quite a few states have banned gutka products already.
There still is a lobby, but I’d be hesitant to think that that’s all there is to the issue. Smoking is already on a decline, awareness regarding existing products is high. There is a high likelihood of risk avoidance in introducing newer products which might be misunderstood / improperly marketed by taking advantage of lack of knowledge. It is a bit heavy handed IMO, let’s see how the effects of the decision go.
I'm all for holding companies accountable, but I don't understand why Juul seems to get all the blame here, in a way that many other companies don't. Why isn't underage drinking Budweiser's fault? Why are mango flavored Juul pods problematic but mango flavored White Claws aren't? Not saying I think Juul is blameless here.
> I'm all for holding companies accountable, but I don't understand why Juul seems to get all the blame here, in a way that many other companies don't.
There's a lot of money that JUUL is standing to gain if they keep up their market share and conversion from smoking continues to happen at the same rate. Look who stands to lose if they do and you have your answer. It's worth noting this was launched in the US just a month and a half ago: https://www.pmi.com/smoke-free-products/iqos-our-tobacco-hea...
I agree with your sentiment, but to answer your specific question comparing e-cigarettes to alcohol (or really Juul to Budweiser) - public acceptance. Alcohol, love it or hate it, is an integral component of human cultures going back millennia. Drugs (other than alcohol) are also important, but I would wager alcohol on its own is more important than all of the other recreational drugs combined (I welcome arguments against this unsubstantiated claim).
People love to hate cigarettes, especially cigarette companies. Juul just got an enormous amount of money (almost 11 digits) from what was formerly Philip Morris. For the most part, attempts to regulate cigarettes have been successful. Hell, arguably attempts to regulate other drugs have been successful (the war on drugs is a mess, but outlawing psychadelics did impact their availability). Alcohol, on the other hand, is accepted by most people. Attempts to outlaw it have been less than successful (contrary to popular belief prohibition in the United States actually did decrease drinking, but it was still very unpopular).
Taking alcohol away from Americans is like taking away our guns. Maybe it's for the best, but prepare for people to literally die fighting you. E-cigarettes however are still relatively nascent and could be banned before they'd be anything more than a footnote in human history.
Just to nit this / expand because I liked the "integral component" aspect and had not thought of it -- alcohol saved lives in our shared history due to it's use in disinfecting water. Smoking has been around across civilizations for some time, but alcohol/beer had a utility and was used everywhere.
> People love to hate cigarettes, especially cigarette companies.... For the most part, attempts to regulate cigarettes have been successful.
Depends on what your goals were. It doesn't seem like there are consistent goals with vaping and smoking at all. One is reactionary where the the other is health related. I haven't heard any proponent of vaping articulate the expected/desired effect at all—it's entirely based around teen vaping in a vacuum.
I know a lot of young people who would never smoke a cigarette (because cancer), the kind who only eat organic, but who vape "because it's perfectly safe and harmless"
I asked some of them "how do you know it's safe?". The typical answer is "it's just water vapor and nicotine"
1. Many in the scientific community believe that the evidence suggests that nicotine is relatively harmless, on par with suntanning or coffee (which contains acrylamide). You are right, nicotine isn't harmless, but many in the scientific community believe that nicotine is relatively harmless.
Nicotine isn't why cigarettes are bad. It isn't why 85% of smokers will die from smoking related disease. Nicotine itself is a cognitive enhancer, like caffeine.
2. I agree. It's an issue. We should also know more about how specific vape hardware "cooks" the juice and creates new chemical compounds. There should be industry standards and consumer-safety regulations.
Sigh... the thing is, I wish we could approach this non-politically -- like a design problem.
Let's design vapes that are safe and good for you! Which, of course, vapers(?) want as normal product consumers. But, it becomes politics because the thought of healthy and effective new consumer drugs absolutely terrifies people. People want it, though. Why can't they have what they want in a manner that is as healthy and effective as possible?
> People want it, though. Why can't they have what they want in a manner that is as healthy and effective as possible?
You’ll find no argument from me. The comment you were originally replying to though pointed out that some (many?) vapers are currently unaware of or are trivializing the risk of “cooked juice”. And that it’s ironic that many seemingly health-conscious people are doing so.
That is not a rational response. That is trying to justify a behavior that still has unknown long-term health implications.
>> Why is vaping perceived as so dangerous? Compared with cigarettes its damn near harmless
Vaping is also much more expensive than cigarettes. If Juul contributes to getting huge amounts of young people addicted to nicotine what do you think they'll do when they can't afford e-juice? We've already seen the results with fentanyl being the trade-in of choice.
This whole thing has nothing to do with keeping kids off nicotine and everything to do with keeping people of all ages on cigarettes.
Vaping is safer than smoking.
Let's say I'm Phillip Morris. I sell Marlboro and a slew of other cigarette brands. E-cigs come along, offering a safer alternative that is importantly much more cost effective. They're eating my lunch.
How do I kill this industry? I buy Juul. I remove the fruity flavors (which people of all ages enjoy more than tobacco flavors) and I claim that I'm doing it to protect the children.
Juul is now much worse off; big tobacco gets to claim that it's looking out for the kids; last step is to manufacture a public crisis to have cover for over-reaching legislation that bans what would otherwise be the least harmful of all age-restricted products.
We don't have evidence for this. Vaping appears, due to its lack of combustion, safer than cigarettes. But we don't have the science to say it's safer.
This unfounded leap--from reasonable hypothesis to finding--is part of what is getting Juul in trouble.
I do agree with you that, until we've had it around for decades, the real long-term effects of vaping are hard to pin down.
However, as a person who has smoked a pack a day and has vaped, it's my unscientific opinion that the latter is much less harmful than the former. And I think most people who have the experience of using both will agree.
The negative health impact of smoking tobacco is so massive that it's pretty hard for anything to top it. Could vaping be worse than smoking cigarettes over a 40-year period? Maybe. But it seems unlikely because tobacco is so clearly harmful, and so much of that harm we know comes from combustion.
Okay, let's say we accept this. We have plenty of science and evidence to say that smoking cigarettes directly leads to cancer, yet we are fine with cigarettes being legal. Why are we ready to ban vaping because of what we don't know, but we're fine keeping cigarettes despite what we do know?
Cigarettes are heavily regulated, rarely allowed in public places any longer, banned for sale to minors, taxed, and societally increasingly unacceptable.
We’re not making them illegal, but we’re making them as undesirable as we can.
Not a vaper or smoker, and I think both are terrible habits. Is there any reason to believe vaping is more dangerous than smoking? Even if it's only equally dangerous, it should still be allowed to remain legal, right? Albeit with all the same marketing and packaging restrictions that cigarettes have.
8 people went from healthy to dead in the space of 3 months. From vaping-relates illness.
So far, the evidence is that vaping is more dangerous than smoking, which merely increases the likelihood of death from other causes (i.e., lung cancer) decades later but does not itself directly cause death.
At first glance, I thought this theory didn’t hold up to logical sense because ideally the cigarette companies would just switch to selling vapes and dominate that market as well (like Altria buying juul). But then I realized actually this makes perfect sense because no one is going to ban cigarettes. They are too entrenched and the interests too strong. It’s simply not going to happen. But banning vaping is a much more real possibility due to it being “new” and unregulated.
Much easier to kill your competitors than to dominate the market through aquisition.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 149 ms ] threadI don't mind more regulation here, absolutely make sure it's safe and find a set of ingredients that cause the least amount of harm to humans. Why is vaping perceived as so dangerous? Compared with cigarettes its damn near harmless. I don't get it.
My opinion: keep the nicotine for tobacco-flavored pods as a smoking cessation tool; otherwise drop the nicotine and go for a La Croix-style strategy.
"Nicotine causes catecholamine release both locally and systemically leading to an increase in heart rate, blood pressure and cardiac contractility. It reduces blood flow in cutaneous and coronary vessels; and increases blood flow in the skeletal muscles. Due to restricted myocardial oxygen delivery there is reduced cardiac work. In a study, chewing a low dose (4 mg) of nicotine gum by healthy nonsmokers blunted the increase in coronary blood flow that occurs with increased heart rate produced by cardiac pacing. Thus, persistent stimulation by nicotine can contribute to Coronary Vascular Disease by producing acute myocardial ischemia. In the presence of coronary disease, myocardial dysfunction can be worsened."
"Nicotine alters the structural and functional characteristics of vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells. It enhances release of the basic fibroblast growth factor and inhibits production of transforming growth factor-β1. These effects lead to increased DNA synthesis, mitogenic activity, endothelial proliferation and increases atherosclerotic plaque formation. Neovascularization stimulated by nicotine can help progression of atherosclerotic plaques. These effects lead to myointimal thickening and atherogenic and ischemic changes, increasing the incidence of hypertension and cardiovascular disorders."
"Nicotine plays a role in the development of emphysema in smokers, by decreasing elastin in the lung parenchyma and increasing the alveolar volume."
"The simultaneous effect of bronchoconstriction and apnea increases the tracheal tension and causes several respiratory disorders."
"Nicotine use has been associated with Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD) and peptic ulcer disease (PUD)."
"Nicotine has been known to be immunosuppressive through central and peripheral mechanisms. It impairs antigen and receptor mediated signal transduction in the lymphoid system leading to decreased immunological response."
"Nicotine promotes pathologic angiogenesis and retinal neovascularization in murine models. It causes age-related macular degeneration in mice."
"There is synergistic relationship between nicotine and glucose metabolism which increases the risk of diabetes mellitus. This might cause accelerated cataract formation."
"Nitrous oxide liberated from parasympathetico-nergic nerves plays a pivotal role in generating immediate penile vasodilatation and corpus cavernosum relaxation, and NO derived from endothelial cells contributes to maintaining penile erection. Nicotine causes impairment of NO synthesis. This may lead to loss of penile erections and erectile dysfunction."
"Nicotine affects the ovaries and alters the production of oocytes in various animal studies. Nicotine-treated oocytes appeared nonspherical with rough surface and torn and irregular zona-pellucida. Nicotine also caused disturbed oocyte maturation. There is a decreased blood flow to the oviducts and thus impaired fertilization."
"Various animal studies show retarded fetal growth and lower birth weight when treated perinatally with nicotine. The lower levels of ACTH and cortisol due to nicotine are probable reasons for the incidence of lower birth weight in the newborns."
"Nicotine adversely affects many organs as shown in human and animal studies. Its biological effects are widespread and extend to all systems of the body including cardiovascular, respiratory, renal and reproductive systems. Nicotine has also been found to be carcinogenic in several studies. It promotes tumorigenesis by affecting cell proliferation, angiogenesis and apoptotic pathways. It causes resistance to the chemotherapeutic agents."
[0] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4363846/
It's not controversial to say smoking is bad for you. But that's always been not because of nicotine, but all the other substances you inhale when smoking, some of which are known to interact with nicotine. What's controversial is whether nicotine itself is bad for you, in isolation, and it's of interest to people taking it in the form of chewing gums, or more recently, vaping.
Here's Gwern with a bunch of papers arguing that nicotine isn't more addictive than coffee and doesn't cause cancer, and the whole thing is just confusion: https://www.gwern.net/Nicotine#addictiveness.
In short, while available research points towards these things being safer, we really don't know what that margin is. Even if it's, say, 10 times safer, if vaping explodes to more than 10x the current smoking population then net harm could still be increased. Or not! But that's my point: we really don't know.
Personally, I don't think they should be outlawed. I think fruit flavors should be banned just like they are in cigarettes, and I think anti-smoking education campaigns need to ramp up their message to include vaping as a "no, just don't ever even start" part of the effort, and e-cigs should be required to only be marketed as aids for quitting smoking.
[0]https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/141/4/e201735...
Compared to what? Harm isn't measured in a vacuum. In the comparisons that make sense (e.g. vaping vs smoking american cigarettes) vaping is in fact damn near harmless in comparison, even if harmless is not the term I'd use for a vasodilator as potent as nicotine.
All of these "well we don't know vaping is harmless" monologues are coming from bad faith where you compare it to breathing "air" or something. Even that comparison doesn't really work because city air can itself be on the order of harm of a smoking habit—wouldn't it be funny if simply existing in SF turned out worse for your lung health than vaping?
https://www.washington.edu/news/2019/08/13/air-pollution-can...
So... of course we don't know what the harm of these things are, but we do know the harm of cigarette smoking, a factor that seems repeatedly absent from calls for regulations of vaping. Why aren't people banning cigarettes?
I also don't see how comparing vaping to not vaping is a bad faith argument. If smoking causes lung cancer at 13 to 23 times the rate as not smoking, it would seem important to compare vaping's rate to both of these, along with any other health effects. It's one (albeit imperfect) baseline. Sometimes, as in the case of living in a polluted city, the baseline varies and should be controlled for in studies. You yourself emphasized relative harm. So comparing harm of doing something to that of not doing it is exactly what you would want in order to get that relative relationship.
More on pollution-- maybe living with air pollution is worse than vaping, but then living that way and vaping would be worse still. Again, there's that relative harm again. These studies have been done with traditional cigarettes, showing living in pollution increased lung disease but smoking then increases it even more, again all relative (in most studies) to "never smokers". An important piece of research to find out for vaping as well.
Finally you put a straw man up against my arguments when you talk about banning hypocrisy: I don't advocate banning it, and you're right that it seems a silly conversation to talk about banning vaping if you're not thinking about the same for cigarettes. For my part, I generally want vaping to be treated on par with cigarettes, excepting I think it should be marketed as a quitting method, not an alternate life-long choice.
I totally get where you're coming from and am sympathetic to this argument, but I don't agree with it. We have learned a great deal from decades of research in to the harms of cigarette smoking, and have drawn some uncontroversial conclusions about why smoking causes so many health problems. We also can be reasonably sure that vaporizing nicotine does not create those same harmful conditions. I'm not saying anyone knows the long term implications of vaping, but "no one knows what will happen" is not a strong argument to me. As it stands, I think we have every reason to believe that smoking cigarettes is drastically more harmful than vaping.
Should this apply to vodka and other liquors as well?
Just to pick an obviously stupid example, I could chug a can of soda (or seltzer, if you prefer) in one go. It would contain around 2.2g of CO2. If you put that 2.2g of CO2 in my lungs, I would be dead. (Well, you would have to keep it there. It would at least be very painful.)
Or to pick another obviously stupid example, I could drink enough alcohol to kill myself. In most situations, I would vomit or pass out before I got to the fatal dose. But instead, I could give myself an alcohol enema and just die (which does happen, from time to time). So, delivery matters absolutely.
For the non-obvious examples we (at least) need data. If you are putting “high” concentrations of a chemical (for some appropriate definition of “high”) in your lungs you will want some good safety data. For ingestion we already have an FDA approval process. You may disagree with the methodology, but at least it’s there.
Hence dosage for injections/sublingual delivery is much lower than dosage for normal pills to swallow.
Your point about certain populations of drinkers being able to indulge without obvious adverse health outcomes is also applicable to users of vaporized nicotine. And again it is worth pointing out that alcohol is significantly more harmful than nicotine.
I would be curious to see any research that supports the idea that flavored vape products are primarily appealing to underage users. I suspect there aren't many teenagers opting for scotch as their drink of choice, but I am certain there are plenty of adults who prefer a rum punch, peach white claw, jameson and ginger ale, or a glass of wine (it's made from grape juice for god's sake, brazenly targeting the children!), etc.
Juul could have taken a play from the soda manufactures, selling people flavored water (without the hfcs).
I believe vaping is safer (and more depending on the carrier compound) but we know nicotine will still have its troubles.
"Nicotine poses several health hazards. There is an increased risk of cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal disorders. There is decreased immune response and it also poses ill impacts on the reproductive health. It affects the cell proliferation, oxidative stress, apoptosis, DNA mutation by various mechanisms which leads to cancer. It also affects the tumor proliferation and metastasis and causes resistance to chemo and radio therapeutic agents. "
Is this really true? The last time I looked carefully into this claim, I found that pretty much everyone conflates nicotine and tobacco, and that the precious few studies on nicotine showed minimal addictiveness. E.g.:
"However, substantial evidence exists to suggest that nicotine's reinforcing effects alone are not sufficient to account for the intense addictive properties of tobacco smoking ..."[1]
If anyone has further references, that would be great.
There are also known health benefits of nicotine [2][3]. Probably, just like for every other drug, we need to better understand the risk vs reward tradeoffs.
[1] https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/25/4/444
[2] https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/xw7agz/four-surprising-po...
[3] https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/will-a-nicotine-p...
Here's an article that reviews the effect of nicotine as a cognitive enhancer.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/will-a-nicotine-p...
(This is a separate issue from CO2. Motorcycles are not major CO2 emitters, but they are often vastly worse in terms of toxic and stinky pollutants than modern gas-guzzling trucks.)
If a car was developed that generated no greenhouse gases and had no negatives then gasoline cars would be outlawed very quickly.
Smoking/Vaping has no such utility.
This is a moral panic. Somehow it touched a nerve...
I absolutely believe the cigarette companies are behind some part of the current PR kill-job on ecigs. They simply benefit the most.
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/272672/wntd...
Smokeless tobacco is more widely used than cigarettes, and quite a few states have banned gutka products already.
There still is a lobby, but I’d be hesitant to think that that’s all there is to the issue. Smoking is already on a decline, awareness regarding existing products is high. There is a high likelihood of risk avoidance in introducing newer products which might be misunderstood / improperly marketed by taking advantage of lack of knowledge. It is a bit heavy handed IMO, let’s see how the effects of the decision go.
There's a lot of money that JUUL is standing to gain if they keep up their market share and conversion from smoking continues to happen at the same rate. Look who stands to lose if they do and you have your answer. It's worth noting this was launched in the US just a month and a half ago: https://www.pmi.com/smoke-free-products/iqos-our-tobacco-hea...
People love to hate cigarettes, especially cigarette companies. Juul just got an enormous amount of money (almost 11 digits) from what was formerly Philip Morris. For the most part, attempts to regulate cigarettes have been successful. Hell, arguably attempts to regulate other drugs have been successful (the war on drugs is a mess, but outlawing psychadelics did impact their availability). Alcohol, on the other hand, is accepted by most people. Attempts to outlaw it have been less than successful (contrary to popular belief prohibition in the United States actually did decrease drinking, but it was still very unpopular).
Taking alcohol away from Americans is like taking away our guns. Maybe it's for the best, but prepare for people to literally die fighting you. E-cigarettes however are still relatively nascent and could be banned before they'd be anything more than a footnote in human history.
Depends on what your goals were. It doesn't seem like there are consistent goals with vaping and smoking at all. One is reactionary where the the other is health related. I haven't heard any proponent of vaping articulate the expected/desired effect at all—it's entirely based around teen vaping in a vacuum.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21053443
I asked some of them "how do you know it's safe?". The typical answer is "it's just water vapor and nicotine"
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.6b05145#
2. Flavor additives and other agents used in vaping “juice” are not nicotine nor water.
1. Many in the scientific community believe that the evidence suggests that nicotine is relatively harmless, on par with suntanning or coffee (which contains acrylamide). You are right, nicotine isn't harmless, but many in the scientific community believe that nicotine is relatively harmless.
Nicotine isn't why cigarettes are bad. It isn't why 85% of smokers will die from smoking related disease. Nicotine itself is a cognitive enhancer, like caffeine.
2. I agree. It's an issue. We should also know more about how specific vape hardware "cooks" the juice and creates new chemical compounds. There should be industry standards and consumer-safety regulations.
Sigh... the thing is, I wish we could approach this non-politically -- like a design problem.
Let's design vapes that are safe and good for you! Which, of course, vapers(?) want as normal product consumers. But, it becomes politics because the thought of healthy and effective new consumer drugs absolutely terrifies people. People want it, though. Why can't they have what they want in a manner that is as healthy and effective as possible?
Know what I mean?
You’ll find no argument from me. The comment you were originally replying to though pointed out that some (many?) vapers are currently unaware of or are trivializing the risk of “cooked juice”. And that it’s ironic that many seemingly health-conscious people are doing so.
That is not a rational response. That is trying to justify a behavior that still has unknown long-term health implications.
Vaping is also much more expensive than cigarettes. If Juul contributes to getting huge amounts of young people addicted to nicotine what do you think they'll do when they can't afford e-juice? We've already seen the results with fentanyl being the trade-in of choice.
Are you serious? A pack is between $5 and $10 depending on where you live. You might go through that in half a day.
A bottle of e-cig "juice" is like $30 and lasts you for a month.
And I don't even understand the allusion to fentanyl...
Vaping is safer than smoking.
Let's say I'm Phillip Morris. I sell Marlboro and a slew of other cigarette brands. E-cigs come along, offering a safer alternative that is importantly much more cost effective. They're eating my lunch.
How do I kill this industry? I buy Juul. I remove the fruity flavors (which people of all ages enjoy more than tobacco flavors) and I claim that I'm doing it to protect the children.
Juul is now much worse off; big tobacco gets to claim that it's looking out for the kids; last step is to manufacture a public crisis to have cover for over-reaching legislation that bans what would otherwise be the least harmful of all age-restricted products.
Keep smoking.
We don't have evidence for this. Vaping appears, due to its lack of combustion, safer than cigarettes. But we don't have the science to say it's safer.
This unfounded leap--from reasonable hypothesis to finding--is part of what is getting Juul in trouble.
However, as a person who has smoked a pack a day and has vaped, it's my unscientific opinion that the latter is much less harmful than the former. And I think most people who have the experience of using both will agree.
We’re not making them illegal, but we’re making them as undesirable as we can.
Pretty please, can we make them illegal?
So far, the evidence is that vaping is more dangerous than smoking, which merely increases the likelihood of death from other causes (i.e., lung cancer) decades later but does not itself directly cause death.
Much easier to kill your competitors than to dominate the market through aquisition.
Very insightful, thanks for your comment.