E-cig use rampant among teens, adults unaware
Published 11:01 am Tuesday, December 11, 2018
LOUISVILLE — A new infographic from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky and Kentucky Youth Advocates highlights the surge in e-cigarette usage among teens seen across the commonwealth and the nation. While youth cigarette smoking in Kentucky has steadily declined, the growing popularity of e-cigarettes, known as vapes and Juuls, is putting a new generation of teens at risk of nicotine addiction.
“Kentucky just can’t afford to addict another generation to tobacco products, and the fact that youth e-cig use is often a gateway to cigarette smoking makes immediate action imperative,” said Ben Chandler, president and CEO of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky. “Kids may think e-cigs are safe for them to use, but they’re not. Short-term, the nicotine in e-cigs harms the parts of kids’ brains that control learning and impulse control. E-cig vapor also has chemicals and metals that can damage lungs — for both the youth who is vaping and those who inhale the secondhand vapor. Longer term, the gateway effect means kids who use e-cigs today are significantly increasing their risk for cancer, heart disease, stroke, oral disease and tooth loss, and all the other smoking-related health issues later on.”
The new infographic also offers findings from a recent series of focus
groups of Kentucky teens on their knowledge, perception and usage of e-cigarette in their schools. Here are a few quotes from the October 2018 focus group study, which included 35 students in 9th through 12th grade from five counties across Kentucky, including Clay, Jefferson, McCracken, Monroe, and Campbell:
“I’m the only person I know that hasn’t hit on a Juul. I’ve probably seen it three times today in the classroom.”
“My parents don’t know anything about them.”
“People think that since they were made to help get people off cigarettes it means they’re not harmful.”
Flavored liquids, especially the fruity flavors, in e-cigarettes attract teens to the products and their varying levels of nicotine can lead to teens’ addiction, which can cause lasting damage to adolescent brain development. Some e-cigarettes contain as much nicotine as an entire pack of combustible cigarettes.
The focus group discussions also reflected anecdotal evidence that many teachers, school administrators and parents aren’t aware of the newest generation of e-cigarettes, which look like USB jump drives. Because they don’t emit odors and the vapor can be hidden, adults may not be aware that the youth under their care are using e-cigs.
“In 2018, you cannot talk about health and kids without talking about e-cigs,” said Dr. Terry Brooks, executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates. “The youth voices we heard as part of the foundation’s work and attendant research are clear. E-cig use is rampant; it is unregulated. And unless we as a commonwealth treat e-cigs as the health threat it is — in terms of now and in the future — then in 2038, Kentucky will still be the cancer capital of the nation. Purveyors of e-cigs know exactly what they are doing in offering a gateway product to tobacco use and we need to call them on it. Kentucky’s kids need our elected leaders — from county courthouses to Frankfort — to act on their behalf. Those decisions around regulating e-cigs for young people will impact kids today and long into their futures.”