Those concerns are profound, including, lung scaring. These cigarettes are new and were poorly understood before it was released for sale in most states. Mary Jane is known better than e-cigarettes.
April 16, 2015
Federal health officials (click here) lit a match today that ignited a firestorm on both sides of the vaping divide, reporting that current e-cigarette use among middle and high school students tripled from 2013 to 2014.
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) called the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration "a wake-up call to all of us that more and more of our kids are becoming addicted to e-cigarettes.
"If e-cigarette companies are serious about helping people quit smoking, they must stop targeting our kids with their products and pull their advertisements from television," Boxer said.
The American Vaping Association -- an industry group -- in effect labeled the report a smokescreen and interpreted the numbers to indicate that "as youth experimentation with vaping has grown, teen smoking has declined at a rate faster than ever before."...
The verification of any of the current problems linked to e-cigarettes will take some time before their safety can be discerned. This is not about cigarettes and a mechanism that leads to regular cigarette smoking. This is about new problems that are becoming a concern to health officials. These concerns are not unwarranted, which includes disease because of the lack of sterility of this TECHNOLOGY.
The reason teens are a primary concern is because any problems that results may cause them lifetime disabilities. Until all the testing is completed by reputable agencies it is complete foolishness to try the technology and/or use it as a means of social status or recreational smoking.
April 16, 2015
Federal health officials (click here) lit a match today that ignited a firestorm on both sides of the vaping divide, reporting that current e-cigarette use among middle and high school students tripled from 2013 to 2014.
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) called the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration "a wake-up call to all of us that more and more of our kids are becoming addicted to e-cigarettes.
"If e-cigarette companies are serious about helping people quit smoking, they must stop targeting our kids with their products and pull their advertisements from television," Boxer said.
The American Vaping Association -- an industry group -- in effect labeled the report a smokescreen and interpreted the numbers to indicate that "as youth experimentation with vaping has grown, teen smoking has declined at a rate faster than ever before."...
The verification of any of the current problems linked to e-cigarettes will take some time before their safety can be discerned. This is not about cigarettes and a mechanism that leads to regular cigarette smoking. This is about new problems that are becoming a concern to health officials. These concerns are not unwarranted, which includes disease because of the lack of sterility of this TECHNOLOGY.
The reason teens are a primary concern is because any problems that results may cause them lifetime disabilities. Until all the testing is completed by reputable agencies it is complete foolishness to try the technology and/or use it as a means of social status or recreational smoking.