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E-cig use jumps 46% among young adults in one year

E-cigarette use among young adults in the U.S. jumped 46% between 2017 and 2018, suggesting that the vaping industry is making inroads among 18- to 24-year-olds as it has among teens.

Co-led by scientists at USC, the research provides one of the first published looks at young adult e-cigarette use prevalence in 2018 and could inform the movement for stricter rules regarding e-cigarettes. Skyrocketing teen vaping rates and a spate of vaping-related lung-injury deaths have prompted calls for a federal ban on flavored e-cigarettes, among other proposed regulations.

The study appears inย JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Fruity and minty โ€˜pod-modโ€™ products preferred

โ€œSales of โ€˜pod-modโ€™ style e-cigarette products, such as JUUL, with high nicotine concentrations in fruity and minty flavors, are climbing,โ€ saidย Adam Leventhal, professor of preventive medicine and psychology and director of theย USC Institute for Addiction Scienceย at theย Keck School of Medicine of USC. โ€œYoung adults overwhelmingly prefer e-cigarette flavors not present in regular cigarettes.โ€

E-cigarette use didnโ€™t significantly change among adults 25-44 years old and decreased in people aged 45 to 64 years and 65 years and older from 2014 to 2018.

Data for the study came from interviews of 115,556 people โ€” including 13,452 young adults aged 18-24 โ€” who were part of the 2014-2018ย National Health Interview Surveysย conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The increase in current e-cigarette use from 5.2% in 2017 to 7.6% in 2018 in young adults translates to about 700,000 new young adult e-cigarette users in the U.S. The researchers found that increases in e-cigarette use from 2014 to 2018 were not more pronounced in any subgroup of young adults: E-cigarette use increased in both men and women, every income level, most racial groups, and non-smokers and smokers.

โ€œOur results are noteworthy, given that the recent reports of vaping-related lung injuries and deaths have primarily been seen in adolescents and young adults,โ€ Leventhal said.

Is e-cig use helping anyone?

Leventhal says the numbers donโ€™t prove or disprove e-cig makersโ€™ claims that their products are important smoking cessation tools.

โ€œWe found that vaping increased in young adults who had never smoked, and never smokers get no health benefit whatsoever from vaping,โ€ Leventhal said. โ€œVaping also increased in young adult former smokers; some of them might have been people who used e-cigarettes to quit smoking and continued to vape afterward.

โ€œOthers may be people who had quit smoking for a while and saw new nicotine products that enticed them to get back into using nicotine. Resolving this question is an important area for future research.โ€


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