The headlines are terrifying, especially for parents: “Vaping illnesses soar past 1,000 with investigators no closer to pinpointing cause.” “More deaths expected from vaping lung illnesses, CDC says.”
Vaping, the wildly popular new way to consume nicotine, marijuana or just flavored chemicals, has suddenly turned out to be more risky than expected with at least a dozen deaths and nearly a thousand sickened. At the same time, the use of vaping products — especially among teens — has skyrocketed.
New findings released from the National Institute of Drug Abuse, or NIDA, show that “in 2019, the prevalence of past month nicotine vaping was more than one in four students in 12th grade, one in five in 10th grade, and one in 11 in eighth grade,” prompting NIDA Director Dr. Nora D. Volkow to declare vaping nicotine “a public health crisis.”
In response to this crisis, retail giant Walmart stopped selling e-cigarettes in all of its U.S. locations; New York called for an emergency ban on the sale of flavored e-cigs; federal prosecutors in California have started a criminal probe into e-cig maker Juul (whose CEO just stepped down) and the White House seems poised to pull the plug on a slew of vaping and/or e-cig products.
In Washington state, Gov. Jay Inslee called on the state health board to impose an emergency ban on flavored vape products of any kind as a way to “protect the health of Washingtonians, particularly youth.” The proposed ban will likely be voted on by the board when it meets Oct. 9.
But it’s not the only action the state is taking.
Inslee and public health officials also called for mandatory warning signs in retail outlets that sell vaping cartridges and full disclosure from manufacturers regarding vape ingredients and additives, and announced a new, science-based smartphone app to help teens and young adults kick the vaping habit.
The app, the first of its kind to tackle youth vaping, is based on research done by smoking cessation expert Dr. Jonathan Bricker of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.