Author: Staff Writer

  • Trump Pardons ‘Vaping Congressman’ Duncan Hunter

    Trump Pardons ‘Vaping Congressman’ Duncan Hunter

    Duncan Hunter has been pardoned by President Donald Trump. The vaping industry knows Hunter as the ‘vaping congressman’ after becoming the first person to openly vape on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives. In 2017, Hunter introduced a bill aimed at curtailing U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s ability to regulate vapor products.

    U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter

    Hunter, a former U.S. Representative of California was sentenced in March to 11 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to a single count of unlawfully using more than $250,000 in campaign funds, just one of 60 counts he and his wife, Margaret, faced at the time.

    Court documents stated the former Marine and his wife racked up more than $37,700 in overdraft fees and stole the money to cover basic living expenses — including their childrens’ schooling, groceries and pet food for the family rabbits. They then splurged on big ticket items, including luxury hotels, airline tickets, and dinners.

    Hunter’s 11-month prison sentence had been postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic and was set to begin in January. Trump’s full pardon means he will serve no time.

  • Eyes on the Prize

    Eyes on the Prize

    no smoking
    Credit: Tumisu

    While tobacco harm reduction products have an important role to play, quitting ‘cold turkey’ remains a legitimate strategy in pursuit of better health.

    By George Gay

    According to a joke included at the end of a London Review of Books piece by Jerry Fodor, a keynote speaker opens his remarks at a philosophical conference by saying that, in principle, there are 12 philosophical positions, only to be interrupted by a heckler shouting, “13!” The keynote speaker continues: “As I was saying, there are 12 philosophical positions …” but again the heckler shouts, “13!” The speaker then says that he will describe briefly the 12 philosophical positions. The first, he says, is Naive Realism, according to which things are more or less the way they seem to be. At that point, the heckler shouts, “Oh no, 14!”

    You don’t have to be a philosopher to get the message that there is a danger that complexity can suffocate simplicity and the common-sense benefits that the latter has to offer. This isn’t to say there is no need for complexity—just that there is also a need, at times, for simplicity. As I believe Einstein once put it: Things should be made as simple as possible but no simpler.

    Is there not a danger that in pursuing tobacco harm reduction (THR) we are losing sight of the simple? I know it’s unfashionable to ask, but what is wrong with smokers going cold turkey if they want to quit their habit? There was a time when all smokers who wanted to quit went cold turkey because that was the only route out of tobacco. And millions did it. I was one of them.

    What a lot of readers will be thinking, however, is that there’s nothing stopping smokers from going cold turkey, so what’s the problem? Well it’s not quite true that there’s nothing stopping them doing so. I can think of at least two things that would be holding them back.
    One is the fact that various people and organizations have taken a lot of trouble to convince smokers that quitting cold turkey is incredibly difficult, if not impossible. They have tried and largely succeeded in convincing many smokers that they are victims who cannot control their own destiny. Their ability to make decisions about smoking and health has been taken from them by tobacco manufacturers. This, of course, is nonsense, but it is a useful narrative for some people to spread and, regrettably, for others not to counter.

    The other reason is that smokers are given too little help to quit cold turkey. Why couldn’t a large part of THR comprise tobacco tax-funded public announcements encouraging smokers to quit? Of course, there would be a need firstly to sound a very loud warning bell.
    Such announcements should not descend into the type of propaganda beloved of certain governments and organizations where smokers are depicted as being victims of the tobacco industry, patients of the medical profession and the scourge of society. And such announcements should not feed smokers a bunch of lies and half-truths, try to frighten the pants off them and generally treat them as though they were children without the ability to make rational decisions.

    Better still, smokers should be provided with positive rather than negative information. They should be told how quickly, post-quitting, their risk of contracting certain diseases and conditions falls to that of, or near to that of, nonsmokers. And they should be told how, in quitting smoking, and especially in quitting cold turkey, they will be saving money while making a positive contribution to helping prevent pollution and the further degradation of the environment.

    One of the problems is that THR has become monetized—become part of the destructive system under which the worth of everything is judged by its performance on the “market.” We have been fooled into believing that what matters is that smoking is replaced by something that can be sold, preferably for the same sorts of profits that are currently enjoyed in selling cigarettes. That is, cigarettes have to be replaced by less risky tobacco and nicotine products, including nicotine-replacement therapy products manufactured by the pharmaceutical industry.

    And it is true that there would be something to be said for such a way of looking at smoking cessation if it weren’t for the fact that less-risky products seem to be struggling—entangled in endless debates based on science and pseudo-science, conspiracy theories, political shenanigans and great dollops of bureaucracy.
    These debates are all very interesting and take up hours of conference time, but they remain largely unresolved, like Fodor’s philosophical positions two through 12, and they simply leave smokers up a creek without a paddle. The interests of the smoker seem to have been pushed into the background as the various sides in the THR debate defend their own positions and brief against each other.

    That something is seriously wrong with efforts being made to promote smoking cessation is clear from Burning Issues: Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction 2020, the second (the first appeared in 2018) such report written by Harry Shapiro and published by Knowledge-Action-Change. This 162-page report makes the point that after more than a decade of product availability, there are only nine users of “safer nicotine products” (SNP—vapor devices and heated-tobacco devices, Swedish style snus and some other safer forms of smokeless tobacco) for every 100 smokers.

    This should sound alarm bells, and it does, but those bells are peeling out the wrong message as far as I can hear. They are calling for more of the same. How does it go? Having lost sight of our objectives, we redoubled our efforts.

    I should add, however, that this is an excellent report with masses of information about where we are with THR and the SNPs that underpin it and how we got here. The way forward is less clear because it is difficult to navigate a path in the face of the guerrilla activities employed by those opposed to the THR approach—activities that have so far proved fatally successful in casting doubts in the minds of smokers and vapers. Nevertheless, the report contains 15 recommendations (as well as 20 conclusions) that map out a route to the future. Though, in the light of the short history of THR, some of those recommendations might better be described as wishful thinking.

    One of the things that becomes clear in the report is how little success had been achieved in pushing the quit-smoking agenda before the incorporation of the sorts of harm reduction principles that had already been well established in respect of other health challenges. And little wonder given that pre-THR, the approach had been to bully smokers into quitting. THR takes an altogether more humane approach, as the report spells out:
    “Harm reduction refers to a range of pragmatic policies, regulations and actions, which either reduce health risks by providing safer forms of products or substances, or encourage less risky behaviors. Harm reduction does not focus primarily on the eradication of products or behaviors.”

    Contrast this with the methods employed before THR and that are still pushed by many governments, organizations and individuals—methods that are based on discouragement or punishment. Such methods include the degradation of the products that smokers enjoy through pointless controls on nicotine levels, the banning of harmless flavors and the despoiling of packaging. They include the inexcusable use of smoker “denormalization” or officially sanctioned discrimination. And they include the imposition of grossly unfair levels of taxation.

    guy vaping
    Credit : Omni Matryx

    Meanwhile, there are issues brought up in the report that I believe could usefully be subjected to further analysis in any forthcoming edition of Burning Issues. The report mentions that the World Health Organization (WHO) has “not revised downwards its estimate that one billion lives could be lost to smoking-related disease by the end of the century.”

    Despite the fact that many of us are highly critical of the WHO’s attempts at encouraging smoking cessation, we tend to accept its figures unquestioningly. But whereas, for instance, a figure of one billion is convenient to throw about, when you think about it, it is ludicrously rounded. And given that this is a worldwide figure, you have to ask yourself how the data are gathered in many countries, especially in those where, perhaps because of wars, there are no fully functioning administrations.

    And it would be good to see some of the methodologies used in compiling such figures. Since, I guess, some people die of “tobacco-related diseases” that might also be seen as “pollution-related diseases,” how are these deaths divided up? I suspect that the default setting is to put such deaths into the tobacco-related deaths column, in which case the WHO’s tobacco-related deaths figures are likely to be inflated.

    This is not an attempt to get tobacco partly off the hook but to make sure that we are taking action where action is required and not just where some people would like to see it applied. There is no point in developing vapor devices if the disease problem is down to the pollution caused by air travel, etc.

    But what I would like to see, especially, is detailed information on how “tobacco-related” diseases and deaths have fallen with the reduction in smoking in those countries where such smoking reductions have occurred. In countries such as the U.K., smoking has been falling long enough for the related diseases to be also showing declines, and there should be a recognizable correspondence between the two.

    lady vaping
    Credit: Kjerstin Michaela Haraldsen

    The problem with accepting blind what the WHO has to say is that one can end up being mesmerized by huge figures and drawing some questionable conclusions. The report states, for instance, that the one billion tobacco-related deaths “[are] equivalent to the combined populations of Indonesia, Brazil, Nigeria, Bangladesh and the Philippines dying from Covid-19.” I know that it is considered rather trite to say so, but shit happens, people die, and it is necessary to keep a sense of proportion.

    If you look at a long enough time frame, you could probably say that the equivalent of the population of Belgium will die from having pieces of toffee stuck in their windpipes. And I think the reference to Covid-19 doesn’t stack up.

    There is a world of difference between smoking and Covid-19. A lot of people won’t agree with me here, but people have a choice about whether or not they smoke. But the ordinary person in the street has next to no control over the rise and spread of viruses. That is why, to my way of thinking, viruses are a valid area of interest for the WHO whereas smoking is not.
    I’m not saying that we should row back from THR products, but, at the same time as we are improving these products and making them available, we should be putting our foot down harder on the cold turkey pedal just in case those opposed to THR win the day. It’s not just me being pessimistic. This is from the report.

    As the environment for THR has grown ever more toxic since our last report, we have turned our attention this time to the mechanisms of the well-orchestrated and well-funded global campaigning driving an increasingly prohibitionist response to SNP.
    Despite the above, it is claimed in the report that SNPs have been “disruptive” and that they have provided one of the most startling public health success stories of modern times, claims that, given the slow conversion rate from smoking to using SNPs, seem not to be supported by the evidence. Or perhaps I’m looking at things from the wrong direction. This, too, is from the report:

    “Globally, the value of the vaping market has continued to grow since our 2018 report and is projected to grow further. The chart from Statista43 shows the value of the e-cigarette market at around $19 billion and its steady projected growth from 2012 through to 2023.”
    I see. So it is about monetization, is it? OK, we have to be practical. We have to allow companies to make money, but there’s clearly a problem here. Declines in smoking predated the arrival of SNPs in many of the countries where these sorts of products are affordable, basically the West, but smoking is still on the increase in many low-income and middle-income countries where they are less affordable. If we are not careful, THR will become a system that helps to underpin health inequalities. If you’re rich, you can afford the products to keep you healthy; if you are not … well, too bad.

    By all means, let’s redouble our efforts, but let’s make sure we’re still focused on the goal of encouraging people to stop smoking. We might need to look for new ways of doing this or even old ways, such as cold turkey.

  • Digital Tax Stamps for ENDS Starts Jan. 1 in UAE

    Digital Tax Stamps for ENDS Starts Jan. 1 in UAE

    Electronic cigarettes cannot be sold in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) unless they bear the digital tax stamp (DTS) beginning January 1, according to the Federal Tax Authority (FTA).

    burj khalifa
    Credit: Jan Vasek

    Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) products cannot be sold, transported, stored or possessed without the tax stamp. The DTS system helps the FTA “improve its ability to collect excise tax charged” on such products on being imported or manufactured locally. It also enables “stakeholders to analyse the supply chain to better control illicit tobacco products,” according to a story in the Khaleej Times.

    In addition, the DTS system allows for the implementation of compliance standards. The FTA explained that the DTS system “facilitates inspection and control at customs outlets and local markets”.

    The digital stamps will be placed on the packages of vapor, shisha and other tobacco products and registered in the FTA database. The DTS contains data that can be read with a special device to make sure all taxes due have been paid.

    “When orders are made for these stamps, they are sent to factories to be placed individually. This will ensure each package is tracked to the port of entry of each country, with the supplier submitting the permit form and the fees for the digital stamps … This will ensure all digital stamps are registered and tracked through a central database,” the FTA said.

  • China: Vapor Market Booming Despite Online Sales Ban

    China: Vapor Market Booming Despite Online Sales Ban

    Photo: Timothy Donahue

    China’s vapor market has mushroomed offline after the country banned online sales of e-cigarettes about a year ago, reports Bloomberg. Not even the coronavirus has stopped the expansion.

    RELX Technology, the country’s largest player, opened more than 1,000 stores in the first half of 2020, and said in January it planned to add 10,000 outlets within the next three years. Its rival, Yooz, has also boosted the number of stores.

    Shares in Smoore International Holdings, the world’s largest maker of vaping devices and components for brands, have more than quadrupled in value since the company’s July debut, making it one of Hong Kong’s best-performing initial public offerings of the year. RELX and Yooz are both clients of Smoore.

    Smoore founder Chen Zhiping’s net worth has surged to $14.2 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

    While the coronavirus outbreak affected Smoore’s production and operations in the first quarter of the year, it still managed to post a 19 percent increase in revenue to CNY3.9 billion ($592 million) for the first six months, with more than half of its sales coming from mainland China and Hong Kong.

    Smoore held one-sixth of the global market share for vaping products by revenue last year, and that pie is poised to grow further, according to Frost & Sullivan data it cited in its prospectus. The $36.7 billion global e-cigarette market will reach $111.5 billion by 2024, increasing at an annual compound rate of 25 percent, projections show.

    Mounting restrictions on vapor products globally, including a ban on certain e-cigarette flavor in the world’s largest vapor market, the United States, haven’t scared off investors. Stocks linked to China’s consumer sector have been particularly popular this year as the nation has been among the first to emerge from the pandemic.

  • U.S. Congress Bans USPS From Mailing ENDS Products

    U.S. Congress Bans USPS From Mailing ENDS Products

    The U.S. Congress has banned all electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) products from being mailed by the United States Postal Service (USPS). The rule change was lumped into the Covid-19/ omnibus budget bill passed yesterday. The proposal, collectively called the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
    2021, now awaits a signature from President Trump to become law. Trump is expected to sign the bill later today.

    US Congress
    Credit: Motion Studios

    The updated provision redefines the word “cigarette” under the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act (PACT Act), which is part of the federal Jenkins Act, to include ENDS products. 

    By including ENDS products within the PACT Act, manufacturers and retailers will be banned from shipping vaping products to consumers using the USPS within the next 120 days. All orders of vaping products will be required to ship using an alternate (and considerably more expensive) service that verifies the recipient of a package is at least 21 years old.

    Beginning 90 days after enactment, all online retailers also will be required to file monthly reports with native, state and local governments disclosing the identity, address and product received for all customers, as well as remit any excise taxes owed.

    Many vaping industry advocates are angered by the text of the proposal because legislators used an expansive definition of what qualifies as an “electronic nicotine delivery system” that seems to include products that may not contain nicotine. The term “means any electronic device that, through an aerosolized solution, delivers nicotine, flavor, or any other substance to the user inhaling from the device,” the legislation states.

    Greg Conley, president of the American Vaping Association, said that despite the inclusion of the word “nicotine,” the definition used in the bill is so broad that it appears to capture vaping liquids containing CBD and standalone devices intended for vaping THC or other substances.

    “The sponsors of this legislation repeatedly refused to consider common sense amendments that would have protected youth, while also not needlessly shutting down small businesses. Thanks to their intransigence, the language included in the omnibus is so sloppily drafted that it will also ban the USPS from shipping CBD liquids intended to be vaporized, as well as devices intended for use with THC or other non-nicotine substances,” said Conley. “There are still 36 million American adults smoking combustible cigarettes and over 400,000 will die from smoking-related illnesses this year alone. The American people should start questioning why their government is so intent on making it harder for adults to quit smoking.”

    According to its website, UPS prohibits the shipment of all cigarettes and little cigars to consumers, regardless of destination state. Other tobacco product shipments must be made using the “UPS Delivery Confirmation Adult Signature Required service, requiring the signature of an adult 21 years of age or older upon delivery.”

    Trump has the authority to use a line item veto on the provision and still pass the larger bill, though that is not expected.

  • Australia Tightens Rules for Nicotine E-Liquid Imports

    Australia Tightens Rules for Nicotine E-Liquid Imports

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Australians importing liquid nicotine for e-cigarettes will need to have a prescription from Oct. 1, reports The Sydney Morning Herald, citing the country’s medical watchdog.

    The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) said its decision balanced consumer demand for the product as a smoking cessation aid and the potential for nicotine e-cigarettes to lead to addiction.

    “A patient’s doctor is uniquely placed to give the support required for long-lasting smoking cessation,” the agency said, adding that it had not yet approved any vapor product as a smoking-cessation aid.

    In response to the TGA’s decision, the government will scrap contentious customs regulations, which included a fine of up to $200,000 for those illegally importing nicotine. The regulation was opposed by a large group of backbenchers, and due to kick in from the start of next year.

    The possession of nicotine-containing e-cigarettes is illegal without a prescription in every state and territory, besides South Australia.

    Health Minister Greg Hunt said it was important to note that any doctor could prescribe nicotine-based e-cigarettes.

    “This is not widely understood, and it is an important matter of public information that over 30,000 GPs may currently, and in the future, prescribe nicotine-based e-cigarettes for smoking cessation,” he said.

    Critics say Australia’s prescription-only policy is hampered by the reluctance of many general practitioners to prescribe liquid nicotine and by a requirement to seek a special exemption for each patient.

  • CTFK Funding Under Fire in Colorado City’s Flavor Fight

    CTFK Funding Under Fire in Colorado City’s Flavor Fight

    By Timothy S. Donahue

    The truth is trickling out on Campaign for Tobacco -Free Kids (CTFK). In the documentary You Don’t Know Nicotine,one source exclaims that CTFK is a “dark money organization” that is “just about as greedy as Big Tobacco.” The organization is accused of using its massive amounts of funding to shutter small businesses by using false rhetoric and bad science about e-cigarettes and other vapor products. This has helped create a “regulatory environment where only the wealthiest people will be able to play.”

    arm wresting on pile of money
    Credit: Ryan McGuire

    During a Dec. 8 city council meeting in Loveland, Colorado, that centered on banning flavored e-cigarettes, the accusations levied against CTFK in the film played out in reality. Jodi Radke, the regional advocacy director for CTFK for the Rocky Mountain/Great Plains area, was accused of making false and misleading statements about several Loveland council members in a local newspaper ad and in several social media posts.

    She accused the council members of being in cahoots with major tobacco companies. Those members took great offense to the accusations. Radke admitted to not having attended the meeting her social media posts referenced and had received her information anecdotally. She also said she did not validate what was being told to her with any of the council members she accused.

    “How do you assume I’m pro-tobacco?” council member Don Overcash asked. Overcash said he did not smoke cigarettes, vape or have any tobacco industry affiliations. When asked how she garnered the information for her organization’s ad and social media posts since she did not attend the referenced meeting, Radke replied, “I don’t feel it is a question that should be directed towards me.” Radke would not directly answer other questions from named council members concerning the ad or posts. She said all CTFK actions and policy “are based on science and evidence.”

    Several council members also questioned CTFK’s funding and its sources. Radke said she did not know anything about CTFK funding other than that it came from several major donors, including billionaire anti-tobacco activist Michael Bloomberg. Greg Conley, president of the American Vaping Association, told council members that CTFK had $109 million in its coffers as of 2020 and received an additional $50 million to $60 million per year from Bloomberg (on top of the billionaire’s regular CTFK funding) to help enact flavor bans at the local level. “[At CTFK], science is constantly ignored,” Conley said. “Studies show that flavor bans actually increase the use of [combustible] cigarettes.”

    Radke was also asked by council member John Fogle if the CTFK had ever considered using some of its “hundreds of millions” in funding to help the small businesses affected by CTFK’s agenda. After saying she couldn’t answer the question several times, Radke finally replied that she couldn’t answer the question because CTFK had data that showed “small businesses don’t lose money” because of CTFK policies.

    After several hours of debate, the potential vote was postponed to a meeting in February. For vapor advocates, it was just another day fighting well-funded misinformation campaigns around the globe.

  • Bangkok Authorities Seize $335,000 in Illegal E-Cigarettes

    Bangkok Authorities Seize $335,000 in Illegal E-Cigarettes

    Four people have been arrested and 10 million baht worth of e-cigarettes and related items seized in Bangkok following an investigation into illegal online sales of the banned products.

    Bangkok police
    Credit Jim Moylan

     

    The arrests followed a raid by police from the Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) of a warehouse in Kheha Rom Klao Soi 27 in the Rat Phattana area of Saphan Sung district on Friday, according to the Bangkok Post.

    The officers seized 50,000 bottles of refill liquid for e-cigarettes, 10,000 refill pods, 1,500 e-cigarettes and 80 boxes of related products worth a total of at least 10 million baht ($335,814), CIB commissioner Police Lt. Gen. Torsak Sukwimol said during a briefing on Saturday.

    One woman and three men were arrested. All were charged with colluding in the sale of banned products in violation of the Consumer Protection Act.

    Torsak said the CIB had received complaints that e-cigarettes and refill products of various brands were being sold via Facebook. Administrators of the page claimed that their products were made from dried fruits and posed no harm to users.

    CIB investigators found that the Facebook page had been active for three years. Female presenters or “pretties” were hired to promote the products, which drew many purchase orders, said Torsak.

    The investigators then sought a warrant from the Criminal Court to search the warehouse that led to the seizure of the products, which were imported from China.

    Authorities said they would also call the product presenters in for questioning.

    The government passed a law banning the sale of e-cigarettes in 2014. Authorities have said import and use is banned for health reasons and because electronic cigarettes lure young people into becoming smokers.

  • Health Canada Wants Lower Nicotine Limits for E-Cigarettes

    Health Canada Wants Lower Nicotine Limits for E-Cigarettes

    Health Canada wants to lower the nicotine limits for e-cigarettes to 20 mg/ml. The current limit is 66 mg/ml.

    Minister of Health Patty Hajdu announced a public consultation on Dec. 18, inviting Canadians to share their thoughts on the proposal by March. 4

    According to the government, the proposed changes build on existing measures to address the rise in youth vaping, including extensive public education campaigns and banning the advertising of vaping products in public spaces if the ads can be seen or heard by youth.

    Health Canada is also considering to further restrict flavors in vaping products. It wants to require the vapor industry to provide more information about its products, including on sales, ingredients and research and development activities.

    “Our work to protect Canadians from the harms of vaping products continues. These changes will help reduce the appeal of vaping products to youth,” said Hajdu in a statement.

    The Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) welcomed the plans. “The proposed regulations requiring a maximum nicotine concentration for vaping products of 20 mg/mL are essential to reduce youth vaping and deserve strong support,” said CCS Senior Policy Analyst Rob Cunningham.

    The Canadian Vaping Association (CVA) urged the government to balance youth protection with adult harm reduction. “It is without question that Canada must act to restrict nicotine concentrations to protect youth, but it should not be an all-or-nothing approach,” the association wrote in a press note.

    “Ontario has restricted high nicotine products to age-restricted environments, effectively eliminating all retail access points for youth. This policy has proven effective in mitigating youth use while balancing the needs of adult smokers. The CVA encourages the government of Canada to adopt this policy federally,” said Darryl Tempest, executive director of the CVA.

  • Studies Show Vaping Reduces Smoking Related Illnesses

    Studies Show Vaping Reduces Smoking Related Illnesses

    By Tim Sandle

    Three recent studies demonstrate the potential for improved health effects that can come from the use of e-cigarettes, when such vaping products are used on a permanent basis and the use of all tobacco products is halted.

    Credit: TTI

    The arguments used to promote the use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) and other vaping products is with a reduction in the risk of cardiovascular disease or cancer, and as a strategy to decrease the addiction to conventional cigarettes.

    Other smoking related diseases include risk of lung disease, including lung cancer and emphysema. The research areas that support this have been provided by trade site Vapor Solo. In relation to the research, a review commissioned by Public Health England concluded that e-cigarettes were 95 percent less harmful than tobacco.

    The first set of research is from the University of Dundee, U.K., drawing on an extensive clinical trial into the cardiovascular effect

    CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH
    The second area of research relates to a trial that found that patients (114 in total) who switched from smoking to vaping experience a 1.5 percentage point improvement with their blood vessel function, as demonstrated across a four week period. This improvement was as measured against conventional cigarette users. Heart health was assessed using a Fibromuscular Dysplasia (FMD) test, to assess how far a blood vessel opens.

    Further studies from the research team are underway to measure the effects over a longer time period across which the broader effects of cardiovascular health can be assessed, including the risk of heart attacks. The results are supported by a second study from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, U.S.

    This research strand showed that heavy cigarette smokers with at least a 20 pack-year smoking history can reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease by 39 percent within five years if they switch to e-cigarettes or quit altogether. In a follow-up letter to The Lancet, the researchers “estimate that e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful to users than smoking. Or, as we prefer, smoking is estimated to be twenty times more harmful to users than vaping e-cigarettes.”

    CANCER DEVELOPMENT
    A similar investigation, this time into the risk of developing cancers, was conducted between the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, U.S., and the University College London., U.K. This study was slightly larger, taking in 181 smokers in order to assess the long-term effects of vaping.

    The smoker group included users of electronic cigarettes and conventional tobacco products. To determine the health variance, those involved in the study volunteered to provide saliva, breath, and urine samples. Qualitative questionnaires were also completed.

    The data indicated that levels of carcinogens (including tobacco specific nitrosamines, which are one of the most important carcinogens in tobacco formed from nicotine) taken from former smokers who had switched to e-cigarettes were significantly lower compared with regular users of smoking tobacco products.

    People who used both types of products, so-termed ‘combination smokers’ did not experience any significant health improvements. The third study was published in the peer-reviewed journal: Annals of Internal Medicine, titled “Nicotine, Carcinogen, and Toxin Exposure in Long-Term E-Cigarette and Nicotine Replacement Therapy Users: A Cross-sectional Study.”

    This article first appeared on Newshour.com.