Tag: news

  • Last Day: New York State Vapor Ban Starts July 1

    Last Day: New York State Vapor Ban Starts July 1

    A Billion Lives
    Credit: A Billion Lives

    Tomorrow, July 1st, a ban on the sale of flavored vapor products, other than tobacco and menthol, goes into effect for the State of New York. Pharmacies will also no longer be permitted to sell any tobacco or nicotine product that isn’t an approved smoking cessation therapy.

    Online sales of any e-liquids–regardless of flavor–are banned (vapor products are folded into the same provision that bans shipment of cigarettes to consumers). This does not include components or devices. The penalty for selling or shipping a vapor product to a consumer in NY is a Class A misdemeanor and carries a fine of $5000 or $100 per vapor product, according to the Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association (CASAA), a non-profit, grassroots organization.

    A person other than a common or contract carrier can still transport vapor products, but there is now a limit of 500 milliliters or 3 grams of nicotine. Additionally, coupons or “price reduction instruments” for tobacco products are banned.

    “Vapor manufacturers must post a detailed ingredient list including a disclosure of ‘the nature and extent of investigations and research performed by or for the manufacturer concerning the effects on human health of such product or its ingredients.’” writes Casaa. “Manufacturers are also required to list ‘each byproduct that may be introduced into vapor produced during the normal use of such e-cigarette.’ (this requirement does not apply to any other tobacco product).”

    In April, New York became the fourth state in the U.S. to restrict the sale of flavored vaping products. The New York Assembly reluctantly passed S. 7506-B, a budget bill, which banned the sale of vapor products in flavors other than tobacco. The budget bill was heavily criticized because it debated and passed under cover of darkness, according to CASAA. “There were no opportunities for the public to weigh in on the bill unless you diligently followed the constantly changing bill numbers and language,” the organization wrote at the time.

  • Dutch Plan to Ban Flavored Vapor in 2021

    Dutch Plan to Ban Flavored Vapor in 2021

    The Netherlands plans to ban flavored vapor products beginning sometime next year. The goal is to make vaping less attractive to young people, the government said on Tuesday.

    Flavors currently available range from mojito and strawberry ice cream to mango and chocolate, the government said. With its sweet tastes and perceived lower health risks, vaping has rapidly become popular among young non-smokers, who are often seen to use them as a stepping stone to regular tobacco products, according to an article from Reuters.

    “It is unacceptable that 20,000 people die every year in our country from the effects of smoking and that every day around 75 kids start smoking”, deputy health minister Paul Blokhuis said. “The smoke-free generation we see coming also needs to be free of electronic cigarettes.”

    The government will refine the tobacco law to include the ban on flavored e-cigarettes, which is likely to take effect in the first half of next year, the government said. Tobacco-flavored vaping products will remain available, mainly to help regular smokers kick their habit, it said.

    A Dutch government report in 2017 said that over a quarter of people aged 12-16 said they had tried vaping at least once. Electronic cigarettes and water pipes have been banned in the Netherlands for anyone under the age of 18 since 2016.

  • Youth Ignorant About Nicotine Levels

    Youth Ignorant About Nicotine Levels

    Many U.S. youth don’t know how much nicotine is in the vapor products they are consuming, according to a recent study.

    The study looked at 17-year-olds to 24-year-olds in California, asking them about their tobacco and nicotine usage, specifically pod-based e-cigarettes. The study showed that 26 percent of respondents had used Juul products, 24 percent had smoked combustible cigarettes, 23 percent had used nonpod-based e-cigarettes and smaller percentages had used other pod-based products.

    Users didn’t know how much nicotine was in these products, though. At the time of the study, packaging for Juul products simply said “5 percent”; this has since changed to read “5 percent nicotine,” but that hasn’t helped young users determine what this means in terms of quantity or how it compares to nicotine content in combustible cigarettes, according to the study’s authors.

    “These young people had no idea how much nicotine they were consuming,” said senior author Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, a professor of pediatrics at Stanford University. “If we asked how many milligrams of nicotine are in a Juul pod, for example, we found the answers were all over the place.”

    According to the study, young users chose pod-based e-cigarettes because of their ability to easily hide them (58 percent of respondents) and because the smell is less noticeable than other e-cigarettes (55.6 percent of respondents).