This Article is From Nov 09, 2018

FDA Plans To Impose Severe Restrictions On E-Cigarettes

As soon as next week, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb is expected to announce a ban on the sale of flavored e-cigarettes.

FDA Plans To Impose Severe Restrictions On E-Cigarettes

Many e-cigarette users are likely to get addicted to nicotine

Highlights

  • FDA alarmed by a huge increase in vaping among minors
  • Research indicates e-cigarette users get addicted to nicotine
  • Menthol is permitted in regular cigarettes as well

The Food and Drug Administration, alarmed by a huge increase in vaping among minors, is expected to impose severe restrictions on the sale of most e-cigarettes products throughout the United States - actions that will likely have a significant impact on an industry that has grown exponentially in recent years with little government oversight.

As soon as next week, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb is expected to announce a ban on the sale of flavored e-cigarettes - the majority of vaping products sold - in tens of thousands of convenience stores and gas stations across the country, according to senior agency officials. According to its officials, the agency will also impose such rules as age-verification requirements for online sales.

The FDA moves are being spurred by preliminary government data showing e-cigarette use rose 77 percent among high schoolers and nearly 50 percent among middle schoolers in 2018. That means 3.5 million children were vaping in early 2018, up 1 million from 2017.

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According to its officials, the agency will also impose such rules as age-verification requirements for online sales.
Photo Credit: iStocke-c

Gottlieb, who once served on the board of a North Carolina vaping company, was at one time viewed as an ally of the e-cigarette industry, and delayed some critical e-cigarette rules shortly after becoming commissioner in 2017. But he has also said his first priority is protecting kids from tobacco-related disease.

"We now have evidence that a new generation is being addicted to nicotine, and we can't tolerate that," he said, referring to the vaping data in an interview before he made final decisions on e-cigarette policy.

The only exception to the flavored products ban in convenience stores involves menthol e-cigarette products. The FDA will continue to permit that flavor to be sold because menthol is permitted in regular cigarettes as well, and the agency doesn't want to give traditional cigarettes an advantage over e-cigarettes in the retail setting.

Gottlieb's actions are focused on a specific kind of vaping product that dominates the market - e-cigarettes that use prepackaged flavor cartridges, or pods. That includes the wildly popular vaping products by Juul Labs Inc. The restrictions don't apply to the "open-tank" systems available in vape shops.

Research indicates many e-cigarette users are likely to get addicted to nicotine and some will likely end up on regular cigarettes, a product that kills half its long-term users. Moreover, the long-term health consequences of vaping is not known.

At the same time, vaping devotees and "harm reduction" advocates have said e-cigarettes represent s powerful tool in helping adult smokers to quit more dangerous cigarettes. They have warned making it harder for adults to buy e-cigarettes - or depriving them of flavored products - will be detrimental.

"We have to be really careful not to overreact to the youth problem," said David Abrams, professor of social and behavioral sciences at New York University.

Juul, which accounts for more than 70 percent of the retail market, is sold in tens of thousands of retail outlets.

Gottlieb's steps will almost certainly be denounced as too aggressive by the industry and too weak by public health groups and Democratic lawmakers, whose election victory will likely embolden them in efforts to curb youths' use of e-cigarettes.

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