E-cigarettes have been widely promoted as a way for people to quit smoking
conventional cigarettes. Now, in the first study of its kind, UC San
Francisco researchers are reporting that, at the point in time they
studied, youth using e-cigarettes were more likely to be trying to quit,
but also were less likely to have stopped smoking and were smoking
more, not less.Parliament Cigarettes .
"We are witnessing the beginning of a new phase of the nicotine epidemic and a new route to nicotine addiction
for kids," according to senior author Stanton A. Glantz, PhD, UCSF
professor of medicine and director of the Center for Tobacco Control
Research and Education at UCSF.
E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that look like cigarettes and
deliver an aerosol of nicotine and other chemicals. Promoted as safer
alternatives to cigarettes and smoking cessation aids, e-cigarettes are
rapidly gaining popularity among adults and youth in the United States
and around the world. The devices are largely unregulated, with no
effective controls on marketing them to minors.
In the UCSF study, the researchers assessed e-cigarette use among youth
in Korea, where the devices are marketed much the way they are in the
U.S. The study analyzed smoking among some 75,000 Korean youth.
The study appears online in the current issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health.
"Our paper raises serious concern about the effects of the Wild West marketing of e-cigarettes on youth," said Glantz.
Despite industry claims that it markets only to adults, e-cigarettes
have achieved substantial penetration into the youth market. In the
U.S., the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently
reported that the majority of adolescent e-cigarette users also smoke
regular cigarettes, and that the percentage of middle and high school
students who use e-cigarettes more than doubled from 2011 to 2012. An
estimated 1.78 million U.S. students had used the devices as of 2012,
said the CDC.
In the UCSF study, the researchers report that four out of five Korean
adolescent e-cigarette users are "dual" smokers who use both tobacco and
e-cigarettes.
The authors conclude that young e-cigarette smokers "are more likely to
have tried quitting smoking, which suggests that, consistent with
cigarette marketing messages, some youth may be using e-cigarettes as a
smoking cessation aid...Use of e-cigarettes is associated with heavier
use of conventional cigarettes, which raises the likelihood that actual
use of e-cigarettes may increase harm by creating a new pathway for
youth to become addicted to nicotine and by reducing the odds that an
adolescent will stop smoking conventional cigarettes."
The data for the study came from the Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-based
Survey, an annual, nationally-representative survey conducted by the
Korea Centers for Disease Control in 2011. The sample included 75,643
youth in grades 7 through 12.
Sungkyu Lee, PhD, lead author of the paper and a UCSF postdoctoral
fellow at the time that he conducted the study, noted that e-cigarette
use has skyrocketed in Korea: less than one percent of youths had tried
the product in 2008 when the device was first introduced, compared to
more than nine percent in 2011. Lee is now on the staff of the National
Evidence-Based Healthcare Collaborating Agency in Seoul, Korea.
Among students who used e-cigarettes, eight percent were concurrently
smoking conventional cigarettes. After adjusting for demographics,
current cigarette smokers in the study were found to be much more likely
to use e-cigarettes than non-smokers.
The researchers also found that the odds of using e-cigarettes were
considerably higher among students who had made an attempt to quit
smoking than those who had not. Students no longer using cigarettes were
rare among current e-cigarette users, the researchers said.
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