Dr. James Aw is the medical director of the Medcan Clinic, a leading private health clinic in Toronto.
"They claim the devices can even help people stop smoking. But a recent editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal took a more troubling line,
wondering whether the products are “a Trojan horse that will allow the
tobacco industry to reverse decades of global progress in reducing
smoking prevalence.
>>>>>>>>>>>Here, then, are three reasons I’m concerned about e-cigarettes:
1. The intense marketing push According to
newspaper reports, something resembling e-cigarettes were first patented
in 1963, but they didn’t come to market in North America until 2006 —
and since 2011, they’ve been the subject of an enormous marketing push,
one that seems to have gained traction this year. The gift bag given to
guests at last year’s Oscars included an e-cigarette starter pack.
Celebrities such as Katherine Heigl and Leonardo DiCaprio have been seen
using them, and the devices were all over New York’s Fashion Week. This
sort of marketing seems calculated to make the act of smoking “cool”
again. The products even come with their own lingo — rather than
smoking, you’re apparently supposed to refer to the act of using an
e-cigarette as “vaping” — a reference to the fact you’re inhaling vapour
instead of smoke. The potential upside for manufacturers is enormous,
with an e-cigarette market estimated to reach $10-billion in five years —
and possible spillover effects related to greater sales of traditional
cigarettes.
2. Don’t believe the hype The marketing thrust
seems to be two-fold: E-cigarettes are being spun as smoking cessation
products that likewise provide smokers with a safe and convenient way to
indulge their habits in the company of others. Are they completely
safe? Not according to the FDA, which found carcinogens in e-cigarette’s
aerosol mist, as well as a toxic chemical, diethylene glycol, that’s
also used in antifreeze. And a study published earlier this year in the online, interdisciplinary journal PLoS ONE, found metal and silicate nanoparticles in one leading e-cigarette manufacturer’s aerosol mist.
What’s more, evidence is slim that “vaping” will lead to smoking cessation. One recent double-blinded study concluded that e-cigarettes are only about as effective as a nicotine patch at encouraging people to quit smoking.
Worse still, the marketing of e-cigarettes tacitly encourages people
to continue behaviours associated with cigarette use. The marketing
leverages and perpetuates a perceived “coolness” of smoking, with lots
of images of attractive and fashionably dressed people with cigarettes
between their lips.
The youth cohort is responding by taking up e-cigarettes in troubling numbers. A U.S. survey reported use among youths doubled
between 2011 and 2012, from 4.7% to 10% among high school students and,
more worryingly even, from 1.4% to 2.7% among middle-schoolers.
Studies have shown that peer pressure and family role-modelling
influence smoking behaviour on youth and that smokers who start at a
young age are more likely to be heavy smokers later in adulthood. Will
future studies show that young e-cigarette smokers end up transitioning
to harmful tobacco smoking?
3. Complementing rather than supplanting smoking
The U.S. survey found that 76% of e-cigarette users also smoked
conventional tobacco-burning cigarettes. What also concerns me is the
way e-cigarettes make it so much more accessible for smokers to indulge a
nicotine addiction. Smoking is banned everywhere but the great
outdoors. E-cigarettes, by contrast, are able to be used anywhere — on
the subway, in an office, at a restaurant or nightclub. My fear is that
e-cigarettes will be used by smokers in conjunction with cigarettes, to perpetuate nicotine addiction.
I’m wary of any consumer device, regardless of how clean the delivery
mechanism, that represents a way for people to indulge in an addiction
such as nicotine use, particularly in young people. Parents should talk
to their children about the dangers of so-called “vaping.” And more
studies are required, period, on the health effects of e-vapour.
One of the great public health victories of the 20th century was the
way groups from all aspects of society co-operated to marginalize
smoking. Now, e-cigarettes could incrementally reverse this trend by
normalizing the set of behaviours associated with lighting up. The
industry markets e-cigarettes to consumers as healthy alternatives to
actual smoking. But a device that forms a gateway to a deadly habit is
anything but healthy."
________________________________________________
They claim the devices can even help people stop smoking - well they do!
E-cigarettes are being spun as smoking cessation
products - I thought they were usually spun as a substitute for smoking?
What’s more, evidence is slim that “vaping” will lead to smoking cessation Mmm - not according to the hundreds of letters I get on my You Tube Channel.
Worse still, the marketing of e-cigarettes tacitly encourages people
to continue behaviours associated with cigarette use Oh dear - what behaviours would thise be? Inhalation? Pleasure?
This
sort of marketing seems calculated to make the act of smoking “cool”
again. Well no actually - it would be nice if it made vaping "cool".
Will
future studies show that young e-cigarette smokers end up transitioning
to harmful tobacco smoking? Mmm, that's a hard one, more likely the other way round. Smoking has been so demonised it's a good rebellion tool.
What also concerns me is the
way e-cigarettes make it so much more accessible for smokers to indulge a
nicotine addiction. Yup - that is the rub. It's about smokers finding pleasure.
One of the great public health victories of the 20th century was the
way groups from all aspects of society co-operated to marginalize
smoking. AAAAAARRRRGH!
Now, e-cigarettes could incrementally reverse this trend by
normalizing the set of behaviours associated with lighting up. Well I hope they bloody well do!
Now, excuse me, I'm going to be sick.
How about doing a bit of research and posting results from published studies instead of regurgitating the same tired 5 year old FAULTY study - which has been disproved multiple times now. You're nothing more than an anti-tobacco control freak who wants to violate the inherent liberty of others by trying to control what we put into our bodies. How about reporting on the REAL effects of the so-called demon nicotine. The fact is you don't even know if it's harmful apart from the 4,000 other chemicals (Many of which are addictive) in regular cigarettes. If you can't do better research than the average 5th grader maybe it's time you hang up your medical license and find a new career.
ReplyDeleteI hope you posted that to Dr Aw? Actually the comments on the article are pretty good.
DeleteThe one i liked best was this - CyZane Lisabelle
Indeed, extreme anti-smoking as we now know it, doesn't even have anything to do with social engineering ''for our own good'' . Save a few ideologues and puritans of times past, it is corporate funded marketing partnering with governments, NGO's and the medical establishment, against profit for all of them. Even the Canadian Medical Association that Dr. Aw based in part his opinion about e-cigarettes, received direct funding from Pfizer (makers of NRT and Champix) in the order of $ 780 000 http://www.theglobeandmail.com... And let's not forget Dr. Andrew Pipe's Ottawa model (a program designed to harass smokers admitted in hospital even for problems irrelevant to smoking, to quit -- using pharma products ) is funded by Pfizer http://www.pfizer.ca/en/advanc... . The Canadian Cancer Association's ''Quit to Win'' is partly funded by Novartis http://www.quitchallenge.ca/en... That's not counting what is not as obvious such as doctors getting paid for lectures, conventions, and ghost writing of anti-tobacco and/or anti-vaping articles.
Canadian smokers just sat back and took it for the most part because decades of incessant propaganda has made many of them feel guilty and even hate themselves for smoking, but they drew the line with all this unfounded propaganda on e-cigarettes and the de-facto ban of e-cigarettes containing nicotine in Canada. This is when the true face of Tobacco Control appeared obvious to the general public.