Friday, October 11, 2019
The Power Behind the Vape
We know smoking is a truly bad
habit. It smells bad, shortens lives and
causes a litany of slow-killing diseases. We’ve known about it for a very long
time, despite tobacco industry’s efforts to pretend to the contrary. The
billions of dollars of successful litigation against tobacco products
conclusively proves how wrong that effort was. Looking at the hard numbers, you
might think that efforts to encourage smoking are over,
“About 50 years ago,
roughly 42 percent of U.S. adults smoked. It was common nearly everywhere - in
office buildings, restaurants, airplanes and even hospitals. The smoking rate's
gradual decline has coincided with an increased public understanding that
smoking is a cause of cancer, heart disease and other lethal health problems.”
CBSNews.com, 5/24/17
According to
Wikipedia, by 2009, only “46.6 million, or 20.6 percent of adults 18 and older were current
smokers…. An estimated 36.5 million people, or 15.1% of all adults (aged 18
years or older), in the United
States smoked
cigarettes in 2015.
“Cigarette smoking is the leading
cause of preventable death in the United States, accounting for approximately
443,000 deaths, or 1 of every 5 deaths, in the United States each year. Cigarette
smoking alone has cost the United States $96 billion in direct medical expenses
and $97 billion in lost productivity per year or an average of $4,260 per adult
smoker.”
There’s a lot of money in tobacco, so
with all the appropriate warning labels, the tobacco industry needed to find a
way to reignite America’s smoking habit. But this one you cannot lay on Donald
Trump. Maybe the Obama administration, which let this happen, could not foresee
how vaping was just another marketing path to full on smoking, packaged to lure
the youngest into that life-killing habit. After all, the vaping companies were
touting their products as a path for smokers to reduce and then quit their
nicotine consumption. That’s not exactly what happened, is it? It seems that
the government thought the regulations would be too tough on small retailers,
so…
Emily Baumgaertner writing for the
October 1st Los Angeles Times explains how we got here: “Unicorn
Vomit. Cotton Candy. Gummy Bear. Skittles… Some teenagers who tried these
playful vaping flavors thought they were just inhaling water vapor — not also
nicotine, a chemical considered as addictive as heroin and cocaine.
“Now, as a mysterious vaping-related
lung disease has doctors and parents urging the nation’s 3.6 million young
users to quit, many are finding that they physically can’t — they’re hooked.
It’s exactly the kind of youth addiction crisis the Food and Drug
Administration had warned of four years ago when it tried to ban flavored
fluids for e-cigarettes… If the FDA ban had gone through, the kid-friendly
vaping liquids would have been pushed off store shelves.
“Instead, over the course of 46 days,
a deluge of more than 100 tobacco industry lobbyists and small-business
advocates met with White House officials as they weighed whether to include the
ban as part of a new tobacco control rule.
“The end result: Senior Obama
administration officials nixed the ban and much of the evidence supporting it,
according to documents reviewed by The Times… By 2014, the CDC reported that in
just three years, vaping in middle and high schools had increased by nearly
800%... A national survey by the FDA and the National Institutes of Health
asked young people who vaped why they did it. More than 80% marked the answer: ‘It
comes in flavors I like.’
“FDA documents given to White House
officials ahead of their deliberations suggested that was no coincidence. The
flavor ingredients in some tobacco were the same as those in Kool-Aid, Jolly
Ranchers and Life Savers… ‘The chemicals largely overlapped with similarly
labeled ‘cherry,’ ‘grape,’ ‘apple,’ ‘peach’ and ‘berry’ tobacco products,’ the
FDA wrote.
“Some e-liquid flavors were found to
be poisonous in high doses, according to the FDA. Studies showed that several
cinnamon-flavored e-liquids contained a cinnamaldehyde, a chemical that experts
at the FDA called ‘highly toxic to human cells.’ And some cotton candy and
bubble gum flavors contained aldehydes, a class of chemicals that can cause
airway constriction.
“The FDA was already preparing a
so-called ‘deeming rule,’ which brought new products like e-cigarettes under
the agency’s jurisdiction. A draft of the rule shows that the agency planned to
use the opportunity to take a bold stance against flavors… ‘Given the
attractiveness of flavors, especially to youth and young adults, and the impact
flavored tobacco products may have on youth initiation,’ a draft of the rule
read in October 2015, any flavored e-cigarette fluid would have been removed
from the market within 90 days of when the rule took effect. That would have
been November 2016.
“The ban gained widespread support
from scientists and public health experts and, on Oct. 19, 2015, headed to the
White House for approval… On Nov. 3, the Office of Management and Budget, or
OMB — tasked with evaluating the economic impact of major rules — took its
first meeting with a critic of the ban: Schell Hammel, owner of the Vapor Bar,
a flavored e-liquid shop, including its premium vaping line — called ‘Forbidden.’
“Dillon Taylor, then a lawyer at the
Small Business Administration, accompanied Hammel. Taylor had submitted public
comments that opposed the rule in 2014, calling it ‘disproportionately
burdensome to small entities.’ This was his first of more than 45 meetings at
OMB over just seven weeks… In that time, OMB hosted more than 100 advocates
battling the tobacco rule: At least 44 meetings were with bands of industry
representatives. About seven were with public health experts…
“[By early 2016,] the meetings
stopped… For 88 days — from early February through early May — there were no
public meetings logged about the rule… Then, on May 10, 2016, the rule was published,
establishing FDA’s oversight of e-cigarettes. The flavor ban was missing. So
were more than 15 pages of evidence detailing the role that flavors were
expected to play in the youth vaping upsurge… The FDA, the rule said, was
seeking ‘further data on the role of flavored products in youth initiation.’
“‘You look at these enormous chunks
crossed out, and think, ‘How could this possibly have seemed good for public
health?’ ’ said Eric Lindblom, a former official in the FDA’s Center for
Tobacco Products who now leads tobacco work at Georgetown Law’s O’Neill
Institute… ‘It’s as if they looked at each other and said, ‘If we’re not going
to do anything about this problem, let’s delete anything that suggests we
should.’ It’s a horror story,” he said.
“That August, when the rule went into
effect, teenagers returned to school, and Juul catapulted to success, with
brick-and-mortar sales skyrocketing more than 640% in one year. Altria, the
company that lobbied the White House, went on to purchase a 35% stake in the
company. [Andrew Perraut, a] former OMB staffer, became a public policy
director for Juul, according to his LinkedIn page… There are now more than
10,000 vaping flavors.” Juul has stopped
its marketing efforts, but its products are still out there along with their
competitors. And there are plenty of new customers who don’t need to be
marketed to anymore. They are hooked.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and now we have a two-fer problem: banning the child-luring vaping
phenomenon and then dealing with the newly created addicts.
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