Surgeon General Sounds Alarm On Teens And E-Cigarettes

<p>The U.S. surgeon general is calling e-cigarettes an emerging public health threat to the nation&rsquo;s youth.&nbsp;</p>

Thursday, December 8th 2016, 1:54 pm

By: News On 6


The U.S. surgeon general is calling e-cigarettes an emerging public health threat to the nation’s youth.

In a report released Thursday, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy acknowledged a need for more research into the health effects of “vaping,” but says e-cigarettes aren’t harmless and too many teens are using them.

“We have an alarming number of youth using e-cigarettes,” Murthy told CBS News. 

The leap in the use of e-cigarettes between 2010 and 2015 was striking, he said, going from a “negligible” number in 2010 to about one in six high school students who used an e-cigarette in the past 30 days in 2015. 

Know The Risks - E-Cigarettes & Young People

E-cigarette use is now more common among teens than other tobacco-related products, Murthy said.

“I’ve traveled around the country and many young people and many adults don’t recognize e-cigarettes are not harmless. They think these are not tobacco products and that they are benign water vapor. But we know nicotine has harmful effects on the developing brain. We’re issuing this report to draw people’s attention to the scale of the problem,” said Murthy.

Battery-powered e-cigarettes turn liquid nicotine into an inhalable vapor without the harmful tar generated by regular cigarettes. Vaping was first pushed as a safer alternative for current smokers, but there’s no scientific consensus on the risks or advantages of vaping, including how it affects the likelihood of someone either picking up regular tobacco products or kicking the habit.

Federal figures show that last year, 16 percent of high school students reported at least some use of e-cigarettes — even some who say they’ve never smoked a conventional cigarette. While not all contain nicotine, the new report says e-cigarettes are the most commonly used tobacco-related product among youth.

Nicotine is bad for a developing brain no matter how it’s consumed, Murthy said.

“Your kids are not an experiment,” he says in a public service announcement released with the report.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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