Category: News This Week

  • Turkey Bans Importation of All E-cigarettes and Vapor Related Products.

    Turkey Bans Importation of All E-cigarettes and Vapor Related Products.

    Turkey banned the import of e-cigarettes and related products on Feb. 25.

    The ban covers e-cigarettes, accessories, spare parts and solutions as well as e-cigarette products that use heating or incineration, like electronic hookahs. The country had already banned the sale of electronic cigarettes.

    In 2019, 17.6 million illegal cigarette packages and 140,000 electronic cigarettes were seized at the country’s border.

    “We will not give passage to illegal trafficking of cigarette[s] and electronic cigarette[s],” said Ruhsar Pekcan, Turkey’s minister of trade. “I wish the best for our country with this serious measure for the good health of our fellow citizens.”

    About 14.5 million adults and 252,000 children in Turkey use tobacco every day, and about 83,100 people die from tobacco-related diseases, according to the Tobacco Atlas.

  • A Flavored Vapor Ban Bill has Passed in the US House of Representatives

    A Flavored Vapor Ban Bill has Passed in the US House of Representatives

    The U.S. House of Representatives passed a ban on flavored vapor and tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, on Friday, reports The Hill.

    Sponsored by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. and Representative Donna Shalala, the legislation aims to curb the rise of youth vaping rates by banning nontobacco flavors such as mint and mango that public health experts say lure children into smoking.

    Democrats hope to pass the bill to present a contrast to the Trump administration’s approach to youth vaping rates. The Food and Drug Administration began enforcing a limited ban earlier this month on flavored pod-products with exemptions for menthol and tobacco flavors. It also exempted open-tank and disposable e-cigarettes.

    Leading public health groups, including the American Cancer Society, American Heart Association and the American Lung Association, argue the bans represent the best way to tamp down rising youth vaping rates.

    “This legislation is exactly what’s needed to reverse the youth e-cigarette epidemic and end the tobacco industry’s long and lethal history of targeting kids and other vulnerable groups with flavored products,” said Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

    The Senate is unlikely to consider the bill, however, and President Donald Trump’s advisers said Thursday they would recommend he veto it in its current form.

    While most Democrats supported the measure, some voted against the bill, worrying it could give police a way to target African Americans. Menthol cigarettes are disproportionately used by African Americans.

    “Law enforcement would have an additional reason to stop and frisk menthol tobacco users because menthol would be considered illegal under this ban,” said Representative Yvette Clarke, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus.

    She also took issue with the fact that the bill exempts premium cigars favored by white people but took aim at products used by black people.

  • FEELM Wins Design Award for Disposable Paper E-cigarette Product

    Offering a cigarette to a fellow smoker is China’s way. This ritual was complicated to recreate in the electronic cigarette format. FEELM, an atomization technology brand and a business unit of SMOORE, has found a solution.

    The Disposable Paper E-cigarette won the 2020 iF Design Award for most innovative product. The revolutionary concept is a cigalike product equipped with a new eco-friendly paper, the outer layer of which can be torn off before passed on to another user.

    The FEELM product’s paper also improves the degradability of the disable product to a rate of 76 percent in volume when compared with traditional plastic disposable e-cigarette products. Also, the multi-layer paper-rolling design is characterized by allowing for good hygiene and sharing the product during social functions.

    “The used outer layer of the mouthpiece can be torn off before it is passed on to the next 15 users,” according to Sofia Luo, FEELM’s marketing director. “This design protects personal health and spreads the concept of environmental protection while socializing among adult smokers.”

  • PMI Angry That Leading Scientist Not Allowed to Speak at Vapor Forum

    PMI Angry That Leading Scientist Not Allowed to Speak at Vapor Forum

    Philip Morris International (PMI) has taken Vital Strategies to task after the special interest group prevented Moira Gilchrist, one of PMI’s leading scientists, from participating in a forum about e-cigarettes.

    “The world is home to more than 1 billion people who smoke today,” PMI wrote in a statement. “Can we at least talk about their right to better alternatives than continuing to smoke?”

    The company says there is growing recognition among governments, scientists and public health experts that scientifically substantiated smoke-free alternatives—in combination with existing measures to prevent initiation and encourage cessation—can play an important role in addressing the global public health issue of smoking.

    “What’s wrong with having an open, informed debate, with all sides involved?” PMI wrote. “We believe it’s OK to disagree, but we adamantly refuse to accept an honest debate is not possible—or necessary.”

    Gilchrist is PMI’s vice president of strategic and scientific communications. She is responsible for driving the transparent and comprehensive communication of PMI’s smoke-free vision and scientific research to stakeholders across society including in the scientific, public health and regulatory communities.

  • AMV Acquires Kure Brand Vape Shops, Raises Retail Presence to 113 Stores

    AMV Acquires Kure Brand Vape Shops, Raises Retail Presence to 113 Stores

    AMV Holdings (AMV) one of the largest independent specialty vape retailers in the vaping industry with retail and manufacturing operations, announced on January 31, 2020 that it had acquired through a wholly-owned subsidiary, substantially all of the assets of Kure Corp.

    AMV already operates a multi-branded retail footprint, including names such as Madvapes and Alohma, KURE brings another leading specialty vape retail brand to the organization.

    Following the closing of the acquisition, AMV expects that the combined business will employ over 350 people, operate 113 stores in 19 states, as well as international operations in Europe and will have significant retail, manufacturing, and distribution capabilities that will be focused on the goal of providing its consumers with the best selection, service, and quality. Following this transaction, AMV’s plans to continue to expand through acquisitions with the long term goal of eventually undertaking an initial public offering.

    “This is a significant development in the retail vape industry. We believe KURE to be the “Starbucks” of the specialty retail vape industry. KURE has been a great brand in our sector, we are excited to add their distinct line of custom blended high-end flavored e-Juices to our portfolio of proprietary e-liquids, as well as one of the largest selections of the most recognized third-party hardware and e-liquid brands. We are excited about taking this grow this brand and its dedication to customer service, customer experience and unique product experience. I believe that the scale of the combined operations will enable us to increase our investment in quality assurance, science, and regulatory efforts adding both depth and scale to our team. We remain committed to being strong industry stewards and believe increasing scale will matter more and more as companies work to navigate changing industry dynamics and dealing with the forthcoming PMTA applications” said Sam Salaymeh, president of AMV.

  • Glantz Study Claiming Vapor Products Cause Heart Attacks ‘Unreliable’

    Glantz Study Claiming Vapor Products Cause Heart Attacks ‘Unreliable’

    Eight months after the Journal of the American Heart Association published a study implying that e-cigarettes magically cause heart attacks before people even try them, it has retracted the article. “The editors are concerned that the study conclusion is unreliable,” JAHA says in a notice posted Tuesday.

    According to an article on Reason.com, based on data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH), Dharma Bhatta and Stanton Glantz claimed to find that “e-cigarette use is an independent risk factor for having had a myocardial infarction.” Glantz, a longtime anti-smoking activist and e-cigarette opponent who directs the Center for Tobacco Research Control and Education at the University of California, San Francisco, said the results provided “more evidence that e-cigs cause heart attacks.”

    Notwithstanding the evidence that vaping is much less hazardous than smoking, Glantz and Bhatta, an epidemiologist at the center, concluded that “e‐cigarettes should not be promoted or prescribed as a less risky alternative to combustible cigarettes and should not be recommended for smoking cessation among people with or at risk of myocardial infarction.”

    But as University of Louisville tobacco researcher Brad Rodu pointed out last July, the analysis that Bhatta and Glantz ran included former smokers who had heart attacks before they started vaping. Once those subjects were excluded, Rodu and University of Louisville economist Nantaporn Plurphanswat found, the association described by Bhatta and Glantz disappeared, according to the article.

    “The main findings from the Bhatta-Glantz study are false and invalid,” Rodu and Plurphanswat wrote in a July 11 letter to JAHA. “Their analysis was an indefensible breach of any reasonable standard for research on association or causation.” In another letter a week later, Rodu and Plurphanswat urged the journal’s editors to “take appropriate action on this article, including retraction.”

    Eleven days ago, I noted that JAHA had not responded to Rodu’s criticism, which was recently amplified by 16 prominent tobacco researchers, except to say that “the American Heart Association is steadfastly committed to ensuring an objective and thorough evaluation of any and all inquiries received about studies published in any of our journals.”

    I asked JAHA for comment while writing that post, and today I received a reply from AHA spokeswoman Michelle Kirkwood. “Bhatta et al.’s manuscript underwent a thorough and comprehensive review during the past 7 months,” she says in her email, “and the process is now complete. As of 2/18/20, JAHA has retracted the paper.”

    Why did it take the journal so long to acknowledge the glaring error highlighted by Rodu and other critics of the study? Here is how the AHA describes what happened (emphasis added):

    After becoming aware that the study…did not fully account for certain information in the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health [PATH] Wave 1 survey, the editors of Journal of the American Heart Association reviewed the peer review process.

    During peer review, the reviewers identified the important question of whether the myocardial infarctions occurred before or after the respondents initiated e‐cigarette use, and requested that the authors use additional data in the PATH codebook (age of first MI and age of first e‐cigarettes use) to address this concern. While the authors did provide some additional analysis, the reviewers and editors did not confirm that the authors had both understood and complied with the request prior to acceptance of the article for publication, according to the article.

    Post publication, the editors requested Dr. Bhatta et al conduct the analysis based on when specific respondents started using e‐cigarettes, which required ongoing access to the restricted use dataset from the PATH Wave 1 survey. The authors agreed to comply with the editors’ request. The deadline set by the editors for completion of the revised analysis was not met because the authors are currently unable to access the PATH database. Given these issues, the editors are concerned that the study conclusion is unreliable.

    Even before publication, in other words, JAHA’s editors and reviewers recognized that there was a logical problem with asserting a causal link between e-cigarette use and heart attacks based on cases that predated e-cigarette use. They asked Bhatta and Glantz to address that crucial issue, and the authors failed to do so, even though the PATH database included the necessary information. JAHA published the study anyway, and Bhatta and Glantz say they can’t do a corrective analysis now because they no longer have access to the PATH database, according to the article.

    That seems like a pretty slipshod peer review and editorial process, doesn’t it? I suspect JAHA would have been a bit more careful with a study that found vaping prevents heart attacks by helping smokers quit.

  • US FDA Seeks Input From Public to Prevent Repeat of EVALI Event

    US FDA Seeks Input From Public to Prevent Repeat of EVALI Event

    Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration opened a docket to obtain data and information related to the use of vaping products that are associated with e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI).

    This request for information responds to direction from Congress to gather information from the public that could help identify and evaluate additional steps the FDA could take to address the recent lung injuries associated with the use of vaping products and to help prevent similar occurrences in the future, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn stated in a release.

    “Our investigation has brought to the forefront the serious risks of using illicit, black market products. As part of our efforts to mitigate and prevent a potential future outbreak of vaping injuries, we are asking the public for input on additional steps the FDA can take to inform our regulatory work and address the illegal modification of these products.”

    The FDA is seeking unpublished data or information related to the use of vaping products that are associated with recent lung injuries including information on specific chemicals, compounds, ingredients or combinations of ingredients that when inhaled or aerosolized, may be associated with EVALI symptoms, as well as product design and potential ways to prevent consumers from modifying or adding substances to these products that are not intended by the manufacturers.

    Starting Feb. 18, 2020, you may submit responses to this RFI to Federal Register docket FDA-2020-N-0597 on regulations.gov. Comments should be submitted by April 20, 2020. 

  • Oregon Bill Banning All Flavored Nicotine Vapor Products Dies

    Flavored nicotine vape products dodged another bullet after Oregon lawmakers killed a proposal to ban them. Sen. Laurie Monnes Anderson, who championed the bill, said the priority is now to create a program to license all nicotine retailers, according to an article on oregonlive.com.

    “The flavor ban is gone,” the Gresham Democrat said at the beginning of Senate Bill 1577’s work session Thursday afternoon.

    The proposal to ban all flavored nicotine vaping and e-cigarette products came in the midst of an explosion of public awareness about the potential dangers of the minimally regulated industry, the article states.

    Concerns escalated with a lung illness epidemic that has been attributed primarily to black market marijuana oil vape products. That crisis brought attention to an entirely different one – a spike in youth addiction to nicotine, driven by addictive, available and easily concealable vaping products.

    Monnes Anderson’s bill would have banned the sale of all nicotine vape products with flavors, such as mango and mint. Only those that actually tasted like tobacco would have been allowed, the article states.

    In a crucial distinction from a federal ban on flavored products already on the books, the bill would not have distinguished between types of vaping devices – it would have banned disposable, refillable and cartridge-based flavored vape products. Each violation would have been punishable by up to $5,000.

    Monnes Anderson said she didn’t have the votes in the Senate. She attributed that to a variety of concerns lawmakers had, including the potential hit to state revenue if both the bill and a November ballot proposal to increase tobacco taxes pass, the article states.

    In a memo handed to Monnes Anderson and other lawmakers, a lobbyist for tobacco company Reynolds American estimated that a ban on flavored nicotine products would make a substantial dent in state revenue.

    The November ballot measure includes a proposal to tax vaping products for the first time. With a ban on flavored products, the lobbyist estimated that the state would pull in $22.6 million less in potential revenue in the 2021-23 biennium and $24 million less in the following biennium, the article states.

    The calculations are based on legislative estimates of how much a vaping tax would bring. According to 2019 estimates, the state would collect $25 million in 2021-23. Assuming about 90 percent of vape products are flavored, revenue would drop 90 percent as well, according to the lobbyist’s memo.

  • Massachusetts AG Sues Juul Labs for ‘Creating Youth Vaping Epidemic’

    Attorney General Maura Healey announced yesterday that her office has sued Juul Labs Inc. for creating a youth vaping epidemic by intentionally marketing and selling its e-cigarettes to young people. Based on multiple depositions and hundreds of thousands of pages of company documents, AG Healey’s lawsuit reveals new facts that have not previously been made public about Juul’s youth-oriented advertising campaign in 2015.

    In a lawsuit filed in Suffolk Superior Court today against Juul Labs Inc. and its predecessor entity Pax Labs Inc. (together, “Juul”), the AG’s Office alleges that the company illegally advertised and sold nicotine products to underage youth and created an epidemic of nicotine addiction among young people. The lawsuit demands that Juul pay for the costs associated with combating this public health crisis affecting young people across Massachusetts, according to a press release.

    “Juul is responsible for the millions of young people nationwide who are addicted to e-cigarettes, reversing decades of progress in combating underage tobacco and nicotine use,” said AG Healey. “Our lawsuit sheds new light on the company’s intent to target young people, and we are going to make them pay for the public health crisis they caused in Massachusetts.”

    AG Healey was the first attorney general to announce an investigation into Juul in July 2018. Today’s lawsuit provides the first real window into Juul’s original marketing plan, and shows that Juul intentionally chose models and images that appealed to young people, that the company advertised its products on websites geared toward kids, and that Juul shipped e-cigarettes to underage youth who ordered them directly from Juul online.

  • UPS to Require Signature of Person at Least Age 21 for Vapor Deliveries

    UPS to Require Signature of Person at Least Age 21 for Vapor Deliveries

    UPS will now require a person who is at least 21-years-old to sign for all deliveries of packages containing e-liquids, vaporizers and other tobacco products.

    A revision to UPS’s “Transportation of Tobacco Products” agreement in December 2019 includes the change, according to an article on halfwheel.com. It covers all tobacco products including e-cigarettes, vaporizers, e-liquids, cigars, roll-your-own and pipe tobacco, and smokeless tobacco. Cigarettes and little cigars cannot be shipped to consumers due to federal law.

    The change will affect both B2B and B2C shipments, meaning both stores receiving cigars from manufacturers and consumers receiving cigars from stores will now be required to sign for the packages, the article states.

    “UPS policy requires that all Tobacco Product Shipments must be made using UPS Delivery Confirmation Adult Signature Required service, requiring the signature of an adult 21 years of age or older upon delivery,” said Dawn Wotapka, a spokesperson for UPS, in an email to halfwheel. Wotapka did not immediately respond to when the new policy will go into effect, according to the article.

    UPS and other carriers already require a signature from someone at least 21-years-old for alcohol shipments. The minimum age to purchase tobacco products in the U.S. has already increased to 21 at the federal level, though enforcement of that law has not yet begun.

    FedEx, a UPS competitor, banned most tobacco shipments in 2016.