Home Virginia Tech researcher calls for balanced approach when regulating e-cigarettes
News

Virginia Tech researcher calls for balanced approach when regulating e-cigarettes

AFP
vaping
Photo Credit: Aliaksandr Barouski

Banning e-cigarettes could potentially have some unexpected consequences, according to Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC addiction research expert Warren Bickel.

The rapid rise in e-cigarettes’ popularity, a thriving black market for vapes containing marijuana extracts and a mysterious illness outbreak have muddied the public health message recently.

“I’m looking forward to the Food and Drug Administration to step in and enforce regulation of what goes into the product,” said Bickel. “If we are making sure that the products have safe materials in them – and not causing these acute problems then I think that vaping could be a positive outcome and allow people to transition from conventional cigarettes – which results in nearly half a million deaths every year in America – to a product that, if appropriately made, probably has fewer health consequences.”

Bickel is a Virginia Tech faculty member and a behavioral health research professor at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC.  He is also director of the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute Addiction Recovery Research Center.

Health officials have said there have been more than 1,300 lung injury cases associated with vaping along with more than two dozen deaths in recent months.

More from Bickel on e-cigarettes

  • “There’s no upside to smoking traditional cigarettes, whatsoever. Once again, I think this is where we are looking for proportionality.  While more than two dozen people have unfortunately passed away from smoking some sort of vaping product, we have 480,000 who die from tobacco every year. I think we have to balance those concerns.”
  •  “I would encourage families and teachers and school systems to be thoughtful and take the action they think is appropriate to discourage the use of those products by adolescents.  And we have to encourage our policy makers to focus on how we get appropriately made products in the marketplace that are as safe as can be.”
  • “I’d be very nervous about the step back in addressing the smoking health problems, if we were to just say ‘that’s it, we’re done with electronic cigarettes.’  I think there is a middle ground that will allow us to protect kids and get conventional smokers off of those tobacco cigarettes that cause so much ill health.  And hopefully it results in products that have clear standards that allow people to be confident that when they pick up an electronic cigarette there’s nothing dangerous in it.”

Support AFP




AFP

AFP

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Tom Dulaney Slonaker
Etc.

Greene County: Tom Dulaney Slonaker has had several SuperFun careers

healthcare
U.S. & World

Making the case for universal health care: The message is the message

Republicans use framing to deride universal health care when they use the terms “free health care” and “socialized medicine.” UHC is neither free nor socialized medicine, but the terms stick.

flock License plate reader police
U.S. & World

While the political circus distracts us, Flock builds the Digital Police State

While Americans remain transfixed by the political circus — cheering for their preferred party, jeering at the opposition, obsessing over every manufactured outrage and waiting for the next spectacle — the Surveillance State continues its steady march forward.

vdot road
Local

Local road construction, maintenance schedule update: July 20-24

waynesboro map
Local

Waynesboro: Is the city review of the Mimosa Farm permit request just a formality?

vape shop
Virginia

New state law aims to crack down on liquid tobacco, vape sales in Virginia

cinderella project
Local

Harrisonburg: Cinderella Project hosting back to school fashion show