Category: News This Week

  • CoEHAR: Vape Products Most Effective Quitting Tool

    CoEHAR: Vape Products Most Effective Quitting Tool

    Image: CoEHAR

    A recent review conducted by the Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR) at the University of Catania found that e-cigarettes are more effective than other treatments for smoking cessation.

    Published in Drug and Alcohol Dependence, the study represents one of the most comprehensive analyses to date, evaluating 16 systematic reviews and encompassing data from 24 randomized controlled trials (RCTs).

    According to the authors, e-cigarettes outperformed other cessation treatments in eight out of 11 meta-analyses. No evidence was found to suggest that e-cigarettes are less effective than any alternative treatments. And while mixed results emerged when comparing ENDS to traditional nicotine replacement therapy, the overall trend favored ENDS for cessation efficacy.

    “The data from our umbrella review can support the integration of harm reduction strategies into public health policies in many countries,” said Renée O’Leary, lead author of the review, in a statement. “However, the review highlights a critical gap in existing cessation strategies, with long-term success rates for e-cigarettes remaining modest at 10 percent-12 percent and the effect of relapse has not been sufficiently studied. New treatments and approaches are urgently needed”.

    Despite these promising findings, the study also emphasizes the need for greater scientific rigor in the field. According to the authors, the analysis exposes significant reporting biases in many studies.

    “This study provides robust evidence supporting the potential of ENDS as an effective cessation aid, but it also calls for enhanced clinical guidelines and further exploration of long-term outcomes,” stated Riccardo Polosa, co-author and founder of CoEHAR.

  • Dallas, Texas to Consider ‘Public Places’ Vape Ban

    Dallas, Texas to Consider ‘Public Places’ Vape Ban

    Credit: Lucitanija

    According to a city council committee memo, Dallas is expected to consider restricting vaping in public spaces like parks next week.

    The Environmental Commission, a group appointed to advise the city council on environmental issues, recommended in May 2023 that the city restrict vaping in public spaces “after identifying the negative health effects of vaping aerosol exposure,” according to a city memo.

    The city council’s Parks Trails and the Environment committee requested in March that the Office of Environmental Quality and Sustainability and the Environmental Commission recommend updating the city’s smoke-free ordinance to include vaping.

    The full city council is expected to consider the issue on Dec. 11.

    “An outdoor park, as long as you’re being respectful of people and you’re keeping your distance and you’re not getting it in anyone’s face,” said Chris Self, owner of Trilogy Smoke, CBD & Vape Shop in Coppell. Self is a vape advocate who isn’t surprised by the possible rule change. He also says this won’t bother his clients who are used to being discrete anyway.

    WFAA reports that banning vaping in city parks would include all of Fair Park and likely during the State Fair of Texas. The media outlet said it had contacted the city’s Parks department for clarification on this to see if any ordinance change would also extend to the fair.

    “I know they can do a designation area, I know they have a designation area for smoking,” said Self.

  • DEA Begins Formal Process to Deschedule Cannabis

    DEA Begins Formal Process to Deschedule Cannabis

    Credit: Burdun

    The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has begun to publicly share details about its long-anticipated hearings on cannabis rescheduling.

    The agency announced last week that Dec. 2 will mark the beginning of its “formal hearing proceedings” on the U.S. Department of Justice’s proposal to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act.

    A “preliminary hearing” is expected “to address legal and logistical issues and discuss future dates for the evidentiary hearing on the merits. No witness testimony will be offered or received at this time.”

    The hearing began today at 9am and will continue until 5pm at the DEA’s headquarters in Virginia, and a live stream is available.

    Nearly two dozen entities requested to participate in the hearing process, but a DEA administrative law judge determined last week that only a dozen had “established standing” to do so.

  • Justices Skeptical of FDA’s Actions on Vapes

    Justices Skeptical of FDA’s Actions on Vapes

    VV Archives

    The hearing took just over an hour. Today, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in FDA v. Wages and White Lion Investments, LLC, a pivotal case concerning the Food and Drug Administration’s rejection of applications to market flavored nicotine vaping devices.

    The case is about much more than saving the vaping industry; it is also a landmark case for regulatory accountability related to public health and consumer choice. A decision is expected by the end of the Supreme Court’s term in June.

    At issue is whether the FDA acted arbitrarily and capriciously when denying numerous premarket tobacco product applications (PMTA), as alleged by the manufacturers and affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which accused the FDA of a “regulatory switcheroo”. 

    Elizabeth Hicks, US Affairs Analyst of the Consumer Choice Center, stated that the case underscores the need for “fairness and transparency” in regulatory processes. “The FDA’s blanket denials have placed enormous hurdles on firms providing harm-reduction alternatives, potentially decimating an industry that millions of adult consumers rely on to transition away from smoking traditional cigarettes,” she said.

    The court heard the FDA’s defense of the agency’s rejection of two companies’ premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) to sell flavored vape products that it has determined pose health risks for young consumers. The justices took up the FDA’s appeal filed after a lower court ruled that the agency had failed to follow proper legal procedures under federal law when it denied the applications to bring their nicotine-containing products to market.

    In January, the full slate of 5th Circuit judges ruled 10-6 that the FDA had been arbitrary and capricious, in violation of a federal law called the Administrative Procedure Act, by denying the applications without considering plans by the companies to prevent underage access and use.

    Associate Justice Clarence Thomas called the FDA guidance “a moving target” that shifted throughout the process. Also, Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch stated that applicants were not granted conditions for jury trials in administrative cases, as the court outlined in SEC v. Jarkesy. Gorsuch also wondered if the agency had failed to give applicants fair notice that the rules had changed.

    The court has a 6-3 conservative majority that is often skeptical of federal agency decision-making.

    Their lawyers argue that the FDA changed its standard for considering flavored vapes in the middle of the process without giving applicants adequate warning.

    Kavanaugh also seemed to have sympathy for the FDA’s case. He said it was clear from the outset what the FDA’s position on issuing denial orders was: a focus on the harm to young people that flavored vape products bring. He noted that under the Tobacco Control Act, the FDA has the power to regulate tobacco products, with a special focus on youth.

    If, after weighing the evidence, the FDA rejects an application, “It’s kind of the end of it, isn’t it?” Kavanaugh asked.

    Hicks said the FDA’s rejection of Triton and Vapetasia’s applications demonstrates a failure to balance or even understand public health priorities and opportunities provided by less harmful nicotine products.

    “While we all agree on the need to keep these products out of the hands of young people, denying adult smokers access to safer alternatives like flavored vaping devices could have dire consequences for harm-reduction efforts,” Hicks said in a press release. “Regulatory decisions should be evidence-based, not rooted in unachievable or shifting standards that are unreasonable to provide.”

     Justice Elena Kagan said that applicants know that the FDA believes that flavored vapes are especially appealing to children and that they would need to overcome that presumption in their PMTA submissions.

    “I mean, there’s just not a lot of mystery here about what FDA was doing. You might disagree with that, because you think that, in fact, the world of 40-year-olds really wants to do blueberry vaping, but you can’t say that FDA hasn’t told you all about what it’s thinking in this respect,” Kagan told the companies’ lawyer, Eric Heyer.

    Heyer told the justices that if his clients win the case, there could be a change in the FDA’s approach, citing comments Trump has made that he would “save vaping.”

    Just before the hearing began, Tony Abboud, executive director of the Vapor Technology Association. said the High Court has the opportunity to examine and critique the farcical “wild goose chase” manufacturers have been led on over the years due to the FDA’s illegal and bad faith actions.

    “While VTA eagerly awaits the SCOTUS decision, VTA knows that a favorable ruling will not fix the systemic and ideological failures at FDA. VTA will continue to work closely with the incoming Trump Administration, which can quickly and decisively end all current litigation – and all future litigation that will follow a SCOTUS decision favorable to industry – by implementing a new tobacco products standard which establishes clear scientific guidelines for the authorization of products and a real pathway to a broad and diverse U.S. vaping industry,” Abboud said. “Biden FDA’s illegal actions, which have deprived Americans of less harmful nicotine alternatives and are crushing an innovative industry, must be comprehensively addressed immediately through the bold and decisive leadership of President-elect Trump.” 

  • Vietnam Approves Measure to Ban Vapes Next Year

    Vietnam Approves Measure to Ban Vapes Next Year

    VV Archives

    Vietnam will ban vapes next year, reports VN Express.

    On Nov. 30, the country’s National Assembly approved a measure to prohibit the production, sale, import, storage, transportation and use of e-cigarettes starting in 2025.

    Previously, Minister of Health Dao Hong Lan said e-cigarettes need to be banned “due to their harmful health effects.” NA delegates also agreed that policies to ban and tightly monitor illegal sales are necessary.

    World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus praised Vietnam’s action. “Congratulations, Vietnam, on making this bold decision to protect your citizens, especially the young ones, from vaping and heated tobacco products,” he wrote on social media platform X.

  • Massachusetts May Pass Generational Tobacco Ban

    Massachusetts May Pass Generational Tobacco Ban

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    Massachusetts is readying to become the first state to pass a generational tobacco ban.

    Several of the state’s lawmakers plan on introducing bills that would ban anyone born after a specific date from ever purchasing tobacco products in Massachusetts. It’s unclear which date the proposed cut-off will be, but the report says that the group doesn’t plan on taking away the right to purchase tobacco products from anyone who is legally of age.

    Given the bill won’t be introduced until next year, that would mean a date no earlier than 2004, though it might be 2005, according to Charlie Minato of Halfwheel.

    Massachusetts won’t be the first state to have generational tobacco ban legislation introduced, but it could be the first one to see it pass. The state is already one of the least tobacco-friendly states in the U.S. It has one of the 10 highest state tax rates on cigars and is one of just two states that have successfully banned some flavored tobacco products.

    Earlier this year, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld a local law passed in Brookline, Mass., that banned anyone born after Jan. 1, 2000, from ever purchasing tobacco products and e-cigarettes. That success has created interest from other lawmakers in the state, though as recently as last month, nearby Peabody, Mass., tabled a similar proposal after pushback.

    This week, the most prominent attempt at a generational tobacco ban is back in the news. The U.K. Parliament held its second reading of the Tobacco and Vapes Bill. If it becomes law, the legislation, backed by a 415 to 47 vote, would prevent anyone born after January 1, 2009, from buying tobacco.

  • UK Generational Smoking Ban Clears First Hurdle

    UK Generational Smoking Ban Clears First Hurdle

    VV Archive

    A landmark bill in the United Kingdom to ban its younger generation from smoking has cleared its first hurdle in the House of Commons.

    If it becomes law, the legislation, backed by a 415 to 47 vote, would prevent anyone born after January 1, 2009, from buying tobacco.

    Before then, the bill must go through further parliamentary stages, with MPs able to suggest amendments to any aspects they don’t like.

    The legislation includes powers to introduce a licensing scheme for retailers to sell tobacco, vape, and nicotine products in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

    Other proposed measures include a total ban on vaping product advertising and sponsorship, with a possible ban on the sale of sweet vape flavors, subject to consultation.

    While the numbers indicate large cross-party support, there was strong criticism from Conservative, Liberal Democrat, and Reform UK MPs, who raised concerns about “civil liberties.”

    The division list showed Tory leader Kemi Badenoch voted against the measure, having previously said “people born a day apart will have permanently different rights,” reports Sky News.

    Former home secretary Suella Braverman, shadow immigration minister Robert Jenrick, and Sir Iain Duncan Smith were among the other high-profile Conservatives who didn’t back the bill.

    While most Liberal Democrats did vote to support the bill, the party’s health spokeswoman Helen Morgan said: “The introduction of a phased smoking ban is problematic and not because Liberal Democrats want to see people smoke themselves into an early grave – far from it – but because it raises issues of practicality and raises issues of civil liberties.”

  • AYR Wellness Expands to Include Disposable Vape

    AYR Wellness Expands to Include Disposable Vape

    AYR Wellness Inc., a U.S. multi-state cannabis operator, has expanded its Later Days brand to include a line of pocket-friendly vapes with new flavors.

    Patients and adult-use customers in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Nevada, and Ohio can begin exploring AYR’s newest vape offering starting November 25th, with additional markets to follow later, according to a press release.

    The collection of compact disposables offers a discrete delivery system, a 280mAh battery, a USB-C charging port and an oil window. Later, Days Vapes is launching with five flavors: Sweet Strawberry, Juicy Mango, Frozen Watermelon, Winter Mint, and Georgia Peach. The easy-to-use devices will initially be available in a 1g size in all states, with a 2g size launching in New Jersey and Massachusetts in early 2025.

    “We’ve placed a major emphasis on both rationalizing our brand portfolio and enhancing product selection, with hardware designed to deliver excellent experiences for our customers,” said George Denardo, chief operating officer at AYR. “Later Days stands out in a crowded vape market with a unique blend of creativity, innovation, and quality.

    “The fun and familiar format, combined with a range of refreshing mint and fruit-forward flavors, addresses what a growing segment of cannabis consumers are looking for.”

  • FDA Seeks Fines for 18 Sellers of Illegal Vapes

    FDA Seeks Fines for 18 Sellers of Illegal Vapes

    Credit: Adobe Stock

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it is seeking fines against two brick-and-mortar retailers and 16 online retailers who have continued to sell unauthorized vaping products.

    The regulatory agency previously issued warning letters to these retailers for their sale of unauthorized tobacco products; however, follow-up inspections revealed that the retailers had failed to correct the violations, according to an agency press release.

    “Many recipients of warning letters correct the violative conduct, the release states. “However, failure to promptly correct the violations can result in additional enforcement actions such as civil money penalties, as is the case for these companies.”

    The FDA has filed civil money penalty complaints against 79 manufacturers and 175 retailers for distribution and/or sale of unauthorized tobacco products. Additionally, the FDA works closely with federal enforcement partners, including through a newly announced federal interagency task force.

    For example, FDA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection recently announced the seizure of $76 million in illegal e-cigarettes.

    A bipartisan group of influential House lawmakers recently stated their doubts about the Food and Drug Administration’s proposal to begin collecting fees from e-cigarette companies, akin to how the agency charges fees to tobacco firms.

    FDA officials say that the fees would give regulators resources to tackle the thousands of illegal vapes lining store shelves.

  • South Korea Expands Vape-Only Smoking Lounges 

    South Korea Expands Vape-Only Smoking Lounges 

    Credit: Sayan

    With the growing popularity of e-cigarettes, South Korea is increasingly accommodating users by introducing dedicated smoking spaces, reflecting a broader shift in attitudes toward smoking alternatives.

    E-cigarette-exclusive lounges have emerged in places like Incheon International Airport and major commercial hubs, catering to smokers who wish to avoid the strong odors and cramped conditions of traditional smoking booths.

    Incheon Airport, for instance, has operated three e-cigarette lounges since June—one each in Terminals 1, 2, and a concourse. These facilities, converted from existing smoking areas, have been redesigned to eliminate ashtrays and mitigate lingering odors from conventional cigarettes.

    According to the airport, these lounges serve an average of 4,000 users daily, with a 4.2 out of 5 satisfaction rate, as measured by a September survey, state media reports.

    The rise of e-cigarette smoking parallels shifting smoking trends in South Korea. While overall tobacco product usage increased marginally from 21.6% in 2019 to 22.2% in 2023, e-cigarette usage has grown significantly.