Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Thanks, Dave, for This Comment

E cigI’ve been a pack a day smoker for over thirty years. I switched to e-cigarettes three years ago and have never looked back. I’ve tried two or three tobacco cigarettes in the last three years just to see if I would like them over my e-cigarette and I can say no. I don’t miss tobacco in the least. No smell, no bad breath, no ashes or butts to worry about. Did e cigarettes help me quit smoking? Yes.


Did e-cigarettes help me break my addiction to nicotine? No. I’m probably more dependent on nicotine now than I was when I smoked tobacco because in order to achieve the “throat hit” I got from tobacco cigarettes, I’v had to use a higher amount if nicotine in my e-cigarettes. I’ve read articles stating nicotine by itself isn’t any more harmful than caffeine. I take that with a grain of salt since I’m not qualified to agree or dispute that claim, but I can say I feel much better physically now than I did when I smoked tobacco. I no longer cough in the morning and my lungs have definitely improved. I have more energy now and don’t get winded as easily when exerted, and my cholesterol count has also dropped significantly. I enjoyed smoking more for the oral fixation than the physical addiction, and I can say I have no intention of quitting e-cigarettes, (unless there are new findings of health hazards).


Can e-cigarettes help someone quit smoking? I think it depends on the intentions of the smoker. There are two basic ways to break the dependents of nicotine, cold turkey, or weening. The weening method can be accomplished by slowly decreasing the amount of cigarettes you smoke until you eventually stop, or by substituting tobacco with another form of nicotine delivery, either the patch or e-cigarettes, then slowly reducing the amounts of nicotine until you feel confident enough to stop. I personally don’t think e-cigarettes will cause a young person to start smoking tobacco cigarettes. I personally don’t think e-cigarettes will cause a young person to start smoking tobacco cigarettes. I think if a young person gets addiction to nicotine by the use of e-cigarettes, they will stick with them instead of switching to tobacco cigarettes just because of the many advantages of e-cigarettes over tobacco ones.


Submitted on 2013/12/31 at 2:06 pm



Thanks, Dave, for This Comment

Monday, December 30, 2013

Sales of e-cigarettes soar into million-dollar business in Greater New Haven


d1starterdual.1Sales of e-cigarettes are soaring and under the spotlight as more people choose what is becoming an increasingly popular alternative to conventional cigarettes.


And while anti-smoking advocates question their safety and recent studies have suggested electronic cigarettes may expose others to nicotine involuntarily when used indoors, e-cigarette store owners are defending the product and raving about its success rate.


Maciej Goniewiz of Roswell Park Cancer Institute recently found that e-cigarettes, which are designed to generate nicotine aerosol, or vapor, without burning tobacco, do release a significant amount of nicotine (but not carbon monoxide or other toxic elements).


E-cigarettes produce “significantly lower” amounts of nicotine than regular tobacco cigarettes, however, according to Goniewiz.


Users call it “vaping,” not smoking, since the devices’ nicotine solution — sometimes candy-flavored — is usually heated by a coil and turned into vapor.


Goniewiz’s results showed the amounts of nicotine emitted into the air “depended on the e-cigarette brand.”


Craig Keller, owner of The Steam Co. in Orange, and Ted Szabo, one of three owners of E-Six in Branford, stand behind the devices.


“My interpretation of the study is that there was nothing significant about the exhale vapor,” Keller said.


Keller, who once smoked two packs of cigarettes a day, said he wasn’t able to find anything that enticed him to stop, until e-cigarettes.


“I think people are catching on that they can still have their nicotine and not be so at risk,” Keller said.


With more smokers catching on, Keller said his business is doing well.


“The industry is booming right now. This is the only product that has given cigarette companies a run for their money,” Keller said.


And Szabo agreed.


Szabo said his store was the first of its kind in the state, and business is doing well.


“Within the first year of being opened, we’ve done about $1 million in sales,” Szabo said.


Szabo, who smoked for more than 30 years, said the products are “extremely beneficial.”


“I wish there were studies out to compare its (e-cigarettes) effectiveness with the patch or Nicorette gum, but there isn’t. I think people are resistant to that,” Szabo said, acknowledging e-cigarettes do leave traces of nicotine in the air.


Szabo does note there are limitations to where the devices can be used.


“I understand that if you’re eating at a restaurant, it would be inappropriate to pull out an e-cigarette or if there are children in the room, I don’t suggest that,” Szabo said.


And to those looking to ban e-cigarettes, Szabo said it’s being done out of ignorance.


State Sen. Edward Meyer, D-Guilford, has said legislators are currently asking if the definition of smoking real cigarettes should be expanded to the electronic devices.


“What isn’t in question is the medical testimony,” Meyer said. “We’re getting information that they are a health risk.”


But Szabo isn’t buying it.


“It’s upsetting. These laws are being made out of ignorance, not on hard research,” Szabo said.


By Ebony Walmsley, New Haven Register Call Ebony Walmsley at 203-789-5734. Have questions, feedback or ideas about our news coverage? Connect directly with the editors of the New Haven Register at AskTheRegister.com.




Sales of e-cigarettes soar into million-dollar business in Greater New Haven

Thursday, December 26, 2013

E-cigarettes take social scene by storm; pose headaches for regulators

Yvaping5ou may not have known what an e-cigarette was at the start of 2013. But chances are, you do now.


Leo DiCaprio and Katherine Heigl puff on them. Talk show host Jenny McCarthy and actor Stephen Dorff hawk them. For that matter, so does Santa Claus (at least in one controversial billboard).


A telltale sign of the burgeoning popularity of e-cigarettes: Internet searches for the products have grown exponentially in recent years. A study by U.S. researchers showed a several hundred-fold increase in searches for the devices over other smoking alternatives such as nicotine patches between 2008 and 2010.


“It’s far outpacing anything else in many parts of the world,” says senior author Dr. John Brownstein, an associate professor at Harvard University.


Another U.S. study suggested that in 2012, eight per cent of people in the general population had tried an e-cigarette, an activity that’s called vaping (it rhymes with taping). About a third of smokers reported having tried the devices.


With their glowing tips and exhaled mist, e-cigarettes are designed to simulate smoking. Depending on what kind of fluid cartridge — juice in e-cigarette jargon — they are loaded with, some deliver a hit of tobacco’s addictive component, nicotine, while others use non-nicotine laced fluid in a raft of flavours including chocolate, mango and banana cream.


You might think anything that would entice or help smokers to quit would be wholeheartedly embraced by the public health field. But in this case, you would be wrong. Addiction treatment specialists, public health officials and tobacco control advocates are divided over whether e-cigarettes are useful smoking cessation aids or Big Tobacco’s latest attempt to retain, regain and expand market share by getting a new generation of customers — teenagers — hooked on nicotine.


Should the devices, like cigarettes, be barred from restaurants, workplaces and other indoor settings? Or are they sufficiently different — and sufficiently safe for users and the people around them — to merit more lax regulatory treatment? Would less stringent rules for e-cigarettes “renormalize” smoking, undoing decades of anti-tobacco efforts by rendering the act of smoking — or simulated smoking — cool again? Will youth who start by vaping graduate to smoking cigarettes?


There are no immediate answers.


E-cigarettes are “hugely controversial,” says Jessica Pepper, a doctoral candidate in health behaviour at the University of North Carolina. Pepper, who specializes in tobacco control policies, has been researching the devices.


“You have some parts of the scientific community saying ‘E-cigarettes are bound to be safer than regular cigarettes so if e-cigarettes help smokers quit, we’re going to be saving a ton of lives.’ Then you have the other side of the debate where people are saying ‘Well, what if smokers decide not to quit because e-cigarettes keep them addicted? What if smokers don’t quit because they think it’s OK to maybe just cut back a little on smoking and add e-cigarettes?’”


In the face of the uncertainty — and exploding sales — governments have been forced to respond. But the international regulatory approach to e-cigarettes resembles a patchwork quilt.


Last week New York City passed a bill that bans e-cigarette use in restaurants, bars and clubs. In the U.S., where this fall 40 state attorneys general called for tighter regulation of e-cigarettes, the Food and Drug Administration plans to treat the devices like tobacco products.


In Britain, e-cigarettes will be regulated as a medicine, which will likely set a higher bar for manufacturers seeking approval for the products. But the European Union, which had intended to regulate them as medical devices, has steered away from that path. Last week the European commission announced it will set safety and quality standards for the devices and refills, impose stricter rules on advertising and require the products to be sold with safety warnings.


Health Canada would not give The Canadian Press an on-the-record interview about how e-cigarettes are regulated in this country. But two officials involved with the file did outline the legislative lay of the land, speaking on the proviso that their names not be used.


In Canada, e-cigarettes that are sold with nicotine and/or in packaging that makes a health claim fall under the jurisdiction of the Food and Drugs Act, they say. And under that act, a manufacturer must apply to Health Canada for authorization to bring a new product to market.


A health claim might be wording that asserts that the device can help a person quit smoking or is safer to use than tobacco cigarettes.


To date, Health Canada has not approved any e-cigarettes under the Food and Drug Act, say the officials, which means that it is not legal to sell e-cigarettes with juice that contains nicotine in Canada.


Some proponents of e-cigarettes contest that assertion, suggesting e-cigarette juice containing nicotine is governed by the Consumer Chemicals and Containers Regulations of 2001.


Health Canada disagrees. “That is wrong,” one of the officials declares. “Definitely nicotine is regulated under the Food and Drugs Act.”


The other Health Canada official said the department has taken “hundreds” of actions related to sales of e-cigarettes and nicotine, seizing some products, writing letters to inform merchants they must stop selling the combined products and working with Canada Border Services to stop importations of products. But vapers boast online that e-cigarettes with nicotine are easy to obtain here.


Experts acknowledge that e-cigarettes may well help smokers quit. But in order to be able to claim that in marketing materials, a manufacturer would have to provide evidence generated by well-done clinical trials. And to date there isn’t much in the way of data.


A study published in September suggested e-cigarettes may be slightly more effective than nicotine patches or a placebo e-cigarette (without nicotine); 7.3, 5.8 and 4.1 per cent of subjects stayed off cigarettes for six months by using those alternatives respectively. But so few people actually quit smoking that the authors could not conclude if any one method was more effective than the others.


E-cigarettes that aren’t sold with nicotine or which don’t make health claims can be sold legally in Canada, the Health Canada officials say. These devices are regulated under the Canada Consumer Products Safety Act, one of the officials says.


The two-pronged treatment of e-cigarettes creates the odd scenario where an e-cigarette delivering nicotine could not be advertised in Canada, but one without nicotine could be. In the United States, both kinds can be advertised, a reality the attorneys general complained about in their letter to the FDA.


“We haven’t had smoking advertising … at least in the U.S., for so long. … It’s jarring to see the commercials on TV,” Pepper says.


Dr. Richard Hurt, who runs the nicotine dependence center at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., suggests the expansion of the e-cigarette industry and market is turning back the clock on tobacco control.


“In the absence of any regulation, they’re going to push the envelope as far as they can,” says Hurt, who says his program won’t use the devices until they’ve been proven to work in randomized controlled trials.


“That’s the way the cigarette manufacturers did in the 50s and the 60s and the 70s until someone said ‘Enough already.’ And they’re going to push the envelope because if they push the envelope, they’re going to make more money.”


But Kirsten Bell believes e-cigarettes ought to be given a chance.


A professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia, Bell has researched the public health responses to the devices. She feels e-cigarettes aren’t being given a fair shot.


“They were sort of being condemned without trial by the majority of people in mainstream tobacco control in public health,” Bell says.


“You have this sort of unquestioning extension of smoke-free legislation to cover e-cigarettes when of course an e-cigarette isn’t a cigarette. It’s not a combustible product.”


She thinks there’s a sort of moralistic agenda at play, one that equates nicotine use with smoking, even though the dangers of cigarettes relate to how they deliver nicotine, not the compound itself.


“I’m not sure that I buy this idea that because you see people vaping e-cigarettes it’s going to make you go out and try cigarettes,” Bell says.


“I don’t think that they will renormalize smoking. But if they do normalize vaping, that would only be a problem really if vaping itself is something that is harmful. And at the moment, we don’t have the answer to that question.”



E-cigarettes take social scene by storm; pose headaches for regulators

Monday, December 23, 2013

Stop Smoking Cigarettes

e cigs and healthFrom a personal point of view, I detest the smell of cigarettes. It reeks badly and irritates my nasal cavity. However, after discussion with a few people who smokes; an epiphany stroked. Smokers smoke to relieve themselves from stress and also partly due to addiction towards the nicotine content. It’s true when they say; once you pop, you can’t stop. Smoking should never even be attempted as the quitting phase is mentally as well as physically challenging.


Do you know that when a person smokes, they’re releasing second-hand smoke to the surroundings? This means that whoever is beside them would also inhale the smoke that they have just expelled. The detrimental effects of smoking is that cigarette smoke contains about 1000 harmful chemicals and the expelled smoke contains about 250 still harmful chemicals. So to those non-smokers who breathed in whatever smoke that a smoker releases, he would also be harmed.


A smoker tends to have stained teeth due to cigarette smoke and bad breath. Notice how someone cringes when they are having a conversation with someone who smokes. The fact that a smoker is actually making someone uncomfortable just by talking to them is enough indication that it will cause relationship tension between couples. A non-smoker in a couple will definitely be put off by the party who smokes when they indulge in kissing. Eventually, it will cause a relationship to collapse if the non-smoker cannot tolerate anymore and the smoker refuses to stop smoking cigarettes when the non-smoker is around.


This means that smoking can affect a person’s social life with other people. It does not only refer to couple relationships but other people such as parents and employers who are non-smokers themselves. A problem for smokers to anticipate is during interview sessions with an interviewer who is a non-smoker. Since, humans tend to be judgemental; the odour that a smoker diffuses will definitely put off the interviewer. The interviewer might view the smoker as an obstacle for him to achieve the company’s full potential due to the amount of time he will be spending to smoke and also money on cigarettes.


This is actually quite an interesting fact. A male smoker is 10 times more likely to die from smoking than a female. Furthermore, male smokers also tend to be impotent and might suffer from erectile dysfunction (ED) as well as low sperm count.


With so many detrimental effects of smoking portrayed here, is there any wonder why someone would still doubt to stop smoking cigarettes? Ponder on it and make the change today.


At the end, I’d like to share cool website with more information on topics like Quit Smoking. Visit for more details.


By Dennis Moore Hopkins


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Stop Smoking Cigarettes

Friday, December 20, 2013

Regulating E-Cigarettes Could Have Unintended Consequences


John Hartigan, proprietor of Vapeology LA, a store selling electronic cigarettes and related items, takes a puff of an electronic cigarette at his store in Los Angeles on Dec. 4, 2013.


In the absence of federal regulation of e-cigarettes, states have started to make their own rules, but not without controversy



Regulations of electronic cigarettes are expected to be a top priority for states and cities in 2014. But some of the new laws being considered — bans on use in public places like restaurants and bars, and high sin taxes — are based on the assumption that electronic cigarettes, battery powered devices that produce a nicotine vapor, are exactly like the real thing. If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, the thinking goes, it must be a duck.


But it isn’t that simple, say e-cigarette makers, and if policy makers overreach, they’ll face a fight with e-cigarette smokers and manufacturers who say it’s irrational to treat electronic cigarettes like regular cigarettes, and that the laws, which might dissuade smokers from switching to a safer product, may even be bad for public health.


“I’m looking forward to federal regulation. But each state doing its own thing in absence of a federal framework, I think is a mistake,” says Miguel Martin, the president of LOGIC Technology, an electronic cigarette maker in New Jersey.


It seems like every week another city or state has a new electronic cigarette rule under consideration. Utah, North Dakota and New Jersey ban using electronic cigarettes in public places like bars and restaurants. New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles are considering similar bans. Maryland’s Prince George’s county, a suburb of Washington, has agreed to hold off on a ban pending the results of a study on the risks. Proponents of such bans say second-hand vapor might be harmful and that electronic cigarettes glamorize smoking at a time when anti-smoking advocates have largely succeeded in stigmatizing it.


Minnesota is the only state that taxes electronic cigarettes (at 95% of their wholesale price), but industry insiders say they expect electronic cigarette taxes to proliferate in 2014. Utah, Oklahoma, and Hawaii have tried and failed to impose taxes on electronic cigarettes. Lawmakers in South Carolina and Oregon have also considered electronic cigarette taxes, making them likely candidates to continue the debate next year.


The flurry of state regulation has started without any guidance from the federal government — the FDA, which missed a deadline to start the regulatory process in October, says it will announce its intention to regulate electronic cigarettes as a tobacco product in December, kicking off a regulatory process that will take months.


E-cigarette makers say the patchwork of state laws without a federal framework will result in an unintelligent approach to electronic cigarettes that could lead to unintended consequences.


LOGIC’s Martin, a former executive for tobacco giant Phillip Morris, says that absent federal regulation, state taxes would punish retailers who check ID and create incentives for people to buy electronic cigarettes over the Internet, where ID isn’t as easily verified. LOGIC prohibits sales to customers under 18. “There’s a knee jerk reaction to tax. It has cigarette in the name, ‘I don’t know what the thing is, let’s treat it like a cigarette.’ What if science turns out to show that there’s a health benefit to using e-cigarettes over cigarettes and you have a financial disincentive to use them?” he says.


Craig Weiss, the CEO of the Arizona-based manufacturer NJOY, agrees. “If you make it just as inconvenient and expensive to smoke an electronic cigarette as a Marlboro, people are going to keep smoking Marlboros. Is that really the unintended consequence they want? To keep them smoking? Because that is what they are doing and we know the consequence of that is people are going to die a painful and early death.”


In response, some advocates of regulation in the public health community say it doesn’t make sense to subject non-smokers to any kind of fine particle pollution, even though there is wide agreement that e-cigarettes are much less toxic than traditional cigarettes.


Stanton Glantz, a professor at the University of California San Francisco medical school and a leading expert on the effects of secondhand tobacco smoke, says electronic cigarette vapor still emits harmful fine particles in the air. “If you look at absolute levels of risk [of electronic cigarettes], they are pretty bad, because a cigarette is just ridiculously toxic and ridiculously polluting,” he said in a September TIME story. “If you go into a bar or casino where there is a lot of smoking, the only way to get the air that polluted outdoors is to be downwind from a large forest fire. If you say an electronic cigarette is only 10% to 20% less polluting than a massive forest fire, that’s not so good.”


State and city regulations are likely to see major push-back from the electronic cigarette industry and e-cigarette smokers, many of whom believe that electronic cigarettes have helped them quit smoking. “If states get this wrong, if they [incorrectly] tax electronic cigarettes, you are going to see a lot of litigation” from e-cigarette companies, says Christian Berkey, CEO and founder of Johnson Creek in Wisconsin, the largest producer of the liquid used in electronic cigarettes. Berkey says that electronic cigarettes have not produced any proven public health costs that justify taxing them the way regular cigarettes are taxed.


States are also likely to face challenges from grassroots protesters and some members of the public health community who’ve become excited about the prospect that electronic cigarettes could provide safer alternative to smoking that is actually popular with smokers. Roughly 1,000 people protested at the Hawaii legislature when it considered a tax on electronic cigarettes in 2012, a measure that eventually failed. And electronic cigarette smokers — many of whom call themselves “vapers”— puffed on their electronic cigarettes at a New York City council hearing to protest a public use ban in December. In a recent op-ed in the New York Times cautioning against over-regulation of electronic cigarettes, professors Amy Fairchild and James Colgrove of Columbia’s Mailman School of Public health wrote: “If e-cigarettes can reduce, even slightly, the blight of six million tobacco-related deaths a year, trying to force them out of sight is counterproductive.”



By  @elizalgrayDec. 16, 201322 Comments



Regulating E-Cigarettes Could Have Unintended Consequences

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Cigarette packets will carry larger health warnings under EU rules and electronic ciggies won't be considered 'medical devices'



  • Electronic cigarettes will be sold as consumer products from 2016

  • Many governments had wanted them to be sold as more tightly regulated medical devices


  • Health warnings will have to cover 65% of packets for tobacco products


European Union diplomats today approved new anti-tobaNew rules: The European Union today approved new anti-tobacco legislation that will come into force in 2016cco legislation, including larger health warnings on cigarette packets and its first ever rules on electronic cigarettes.


Most e-cigarettes will be sold as consumer products rather than as more tightly regulated medical devices, as governments had initially wanted.


But while popular refillable e-cigarettes will be allowed, the European Commission could impose an EU-wide ban in future if three or more member states prohibit them on health grounds.



New rules: The European Union today approved new anti-tobacco legislation that will come into force in 2016



‘Agreement on the tobacco directive is a big step towards a healthier and more prosperous society,’ said Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis, health minister of Lithuania, which currently holds the rotating EU presidency.


 The deal was struck after governments and the European Parliament resolved a dispute over how tightly to regulate the booming market for e-cigarettes, which some analysts predict will eclipse the $700 billion-a-year regular cigarette market in 10 years.

From 2016 when the rules changes will take effect, cigarettes, rolling tobacco and other products will have to carry graphic picture and text warnings covering 65 percent of the front and back of packets.



Under new rules, health warnings will have to cover 65% of tobacco product packets while flavoured cigarettes will be banned outright



The rules also include a ban on smoking tobacco products containing flavours such as fruit or vanilla. Menthol cigarettes will be banned four years later, after some governments demanded a slower phase-out.


‘I firmly believe that prominent visual warnings will serve as effective reminders of the severe health consequences of smoking and help people make well-informed choices,’ European health commissioner Tonio Borg said in a statement.


‘And the prohibition of characterising flavours such as fruit or menthol, which appeal to young people, will make smoking initiation less appealing,’ he said.


The deal is now expected to be formally approved by EU ministers and the full parliament before entering force next year.


 



Cigarette packets will carry larger health warnings under EU rules and electronic ciggies won't be considered 'medical devices'

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Electronic Cigarettes, the Law, and Your Health

Vaping6When the electronic cigarette (e-cigarette)first emerged in 1963, no one really noticed. The cumbersome device was impractical and ineffective, causing users to strain with every pull. A sufficient battery was the e-cigarette’s biggest problem.


The device went through a renovation in 2007 when China developed a new lithium battery that vaporized the nicotine more efficiently, making the product both smaller and more powerful. The e-cigarette vaporizes liquid nicotine to replace the tobacco smoke.


Those who use e-cigs call this vaping, and the nicotine enters the lungs in the same way a traditional cigarette does, minus the smoke. The user emits a vapor when he exhales. From a distance, it’s nearly impossible to distinguish it from a real cigarette. The nicotine is still addictive, and the habit continues to grow exponentially as costs come down.


Lower price combined with convenience drive the market for vaporized nicotine. Electronic cigarettes are available everywhere, in pharmacies, gas stations, and especially online. As they grow more popular, they also draw attention and criticism.


The users are content with the product, but many outsiders see several serious problems. Currently, e-cigarettes do not fall under U.S. regulation because they contain no tobacco. While many vendors are self-conscious and refuse to sell to minors, there are no technical regulations barring it. In addition, no quality research has been performed.


The health debate


Without regulation, data on the safety of the e-cigarette does not exist. The FDA would be responsible for testing, but it lacks the authority unless changes are made to the law. The e-cigarette companies have no incentive to perform tests when they are selling well without them. Since the FDA is blocked, no one else is motivated to go through expensive testing. The only information that consumers have to go on is anecdotal and suspect.


The problem with the current situation is that the public is rendered powerless, without the ability to review information or make changes. E-cigarettes are a potential health threat or benefit (for smokers), but we don’t know.


I do not advocate more regulation or legislation, but the stalemate is a ridiculous situation for consumers, and a real problem when you consider minors are involved. Many individuals consume the e-cigarettes with the belief that they are safer than tobacco, and if they are, smokers deserve to know. If they are not, then people are damaging their bodies because of a lack of knowledge and information.


In the chaos of inaction, the supposed health appeal of e-cigarettes may even be luring nonsmokers.


Governmental research is the only answer


Some states are considering Canada’s recent move to ban e-cigarettes entirely out of fear and ignorance. They lack the studies to support their decision, and such an arbitrary reaction does not seem fair when the government should perform preliminary studies to see if the action is valid.


With research, governments can make a decision on how to handle e-cigarettes, but they seem content to push the all-or-nothing resolution: either total lack of restriction or a total ban. Inaction is forcing this decision. The only way we can know if e-cigarettes are dangerous is to test their safety.


For the sake of public health, the U.S. government needs to act now by performing research. Actions based upon whim and hearsay make weak government. We deserve to have this important health information available, so that the public can make educated decisions as to how to handle this technology. The only right action, in this case, is research.




Electronic Cigarettes, the Law, and Your Health

Monday, December 16, 2013

Electronic cigarette businesses booming



The surging popularity of electronic cigarettes is spurring growth at two Milwaukee-area companies that have emerged as important producers of the key ingredient, and is creating opportunity here and elsewhere for storefront entrepreneurs.


The local participants have jumped into a market that some believe will eclipse that of traditional smokes within a decade.


“This is one of those few times where you see a brand new industry, and it’s amazing,” said Christian Berkey, founder and majority owner of Hartland’s Johnson Creek Enterprises LLC, which describes itself as the country’s largest manufacturer of the flavored, nicotine-laced liquids that are at the heart of electronic cigarettes.


But it’s also an industry that soon could change dramatically.


To this point, it’s been more or less the Wild West, with production and sales totally unregulated. Now, though, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is poised to step in with as-yet undisclosed rules under its authority to oversee tobacco-derived products.


That could shake up the business models of the Internet-based vendors and tiny, home-based juice-makers that have sprung up over the last few years.


It could even lead to an effective ban on e-cigarettes — something industry observers discount as a realistic possibility.


But regulations also could solidify the positions of firms, such as Johnson Creek Enterprises and Wauwatosa’s Securience LLC, that already have made the move from basement to production lab.


“Regulations will, in general, be good for our particular business,” said Don Muehlbauer, owner of Securience, which says it, too, is among the nation’s biggest manufacturers of e-cigarette liquids. “They will drive out the little players.”


Users inhale vapor


E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices with a heating coil that turns a nicotine-containing liquid — the stuff Johnson Creek and Securience make — into a vapor the user inhales.


“Vaping” generally is cheaper than smoking and, advocates say, safer because it doesn’t produce the tars and many of the harmful substances found in cigarettes.


Critics, however, say the vapors contain dangerous chemicals, and that research on e-cigarettes is needed. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control earlier this year said that while the products “appear to have far fewer of the toxins found in smoke compared to traditional cigarettes, the impact of e-cigarettes on long-term health must be studied.”


Mike Cottrill, 49, of Waukesha smoked for 35 years (Marlboro Menthols) before switching to e-cigarettes last Jan. 1. The habit, he said, was costing him about $20 a day.


With e-cigarettes, he said, “I probably spend about $50 a month on coils and juice.”


Cottrill said his triglyceride levels and blood pressure have dropped, and he’s less congested.


“I started feeling better, and smelling and tasting more things,” he said. And the cigarette smoke he used to crave became a nauseating odor.


“I went back to a lot of my friends and apologized for how I smelled,” he said. “I never knew I smelled that bad.”


Vapor shops growing


Convinced of the benefits to tobacco smokers, Cottrill has become something of an e-cigarette evangelist and, in July, took a job helping run a West Allis store that recently changed its name from Smokin Deals to Milwaukee Vapor.


The shop, tucked in a strip mall at S. 76th St. and W. Oklahoma Ave. in West Allis, sells cigarettes but has been shifting its emphasis to their electronic counterparts.


Meanwhile, at least three other vapor shops have popped up in the area in the last few months — Brew City Vape, along Highway 36 in Wind Lake; Vapor Lounge, 7213 W. Greenfield Ave., West Allis; and VaporLicious, 5101 S. 108th St., Hales Corners.


VaporLicious owner John Fazen, a retired West Allis city worker, opened last month after relocating the business from Port Charlotte, Fla.


“Down there it’s just a zoo of electronic cigarette stores — crazy,” he said.


Whether tiny businesses like these survive is an open question, but the industry as a whole may hold great promise.


‘Game changer’ business


Earlier this year, CitiGroup labeled e-cigarettes one of 10 disruptive technologies and ideas capable of creating new markets. Wells Fargo Securities analyst Bonnie Herzog, meanwhile, labels e-cigarettes “a game changer.”


Herzog estimates 2013 retail sales of e-cigarettes at $1.8 billion. That’s a fraction of the $81 billion for conventional cigarettes, but the e-cigarette sales have tripled in just two years.


And Herzog — an e-cigarette bull — estimates that retail sales of the two products will draw roughly even by 2023, with revenue to manufacturers of e-cigarettes jumping in front even earlier.


“The potential’s huge,” said Dan Bartholow, general manager at Securience, which employs not quite 50 people — among them a chemist with a doctorate degree, chemical engineers and food scientists — in space at the Milwaukee County Research Park.


Securience, started by Muehlbauer four years ago on a picnic table in his basement with help from his son, a chemical engineer, sells juice in everything from half-ounce bottles to 55-gallon drums.


“We stock thousands of gallons of this stuff, which in the e-liquid world translates to a few million packs,” Bartholow said. The firm doesn’t disclose annual sales.


Johnson Creek does — $1.2 million in 2009, $7.6 million in 2012, and, Berkey said, more than $16 million this year.


Tobacco company interest


One reason for the growth: Johnson Creek makes all the juice used in blu eCigs, the largest-selling electronic brand.


Blu was purchased last year by Lorillard Inc., giving Johnson Creek a toehold with one of the Big Three tobacco companies. The inevitable migration of big tobacco into a field that so far has been the domain of small upstarts worries many in the e-cigarette industry.


But Berkey, a 42-year-old accidental entrepreneur who studied political science in college and was managing an Apple store before he started tinkering with electronic cigarettes, isn’t too worried.


“There is far and away enough business for everybody,” he said.


For Johnson Creek, which also has a staff of chemists and food scientists, that has certainly been the case. Started in 2008 in Berkey’s home basement in the village that gave the firm its name, the company now leases 52,000 square feet of space in a Hartland industrial park.


The plant includes a production operation in a clean room — HEPA-filtered air, workers in haz-mat style suits — a growing customer-service wing and free lunch for the 54 employees.


Berkey expects to hire another 20 over the next few months and to double the firm’s footprint by buying the building it now leases. He also envisions opening a second, highly automated plant in Waukesha sometime next year.


“Things have taken off in a way none of us ever imagined it would,” he said.




Read more from Journal Sentinel: http://www.jsonline.com/mainheadlines/business/electronic-cigarette-businesses-booming-b99155894z1-235887541.html#ixzz2ne848GyO

Follow us: @JournalSentinel on Twitter



Electronic cigarette businesses booming

Friday, December 13, 2013

E-Cigarette Health Row Catches Fire

Vaping6As New York and Chicago become the first major U.S. cities to propose tighter regulation ofelectronic cigarettes, the row over their safety has caught fire. Supporters believe the battery-operated cigarettes are a harmless alternative to tobacco smokers, while opponents say they may carry the same dangerous health effects.


Tom Kiklas, the president and co-founder of the Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, said he believes the fears about e-smoking, or “vaping,” are unfounded, and a bit misleading.


“First of all, nicotine is classified as a secondary stimulant, the same as caffeine. People believe it is dangerous on an emotional level, but it is not a dangerous drug,” Kiklas said.


But many health experts vehemently disagree with this statement, including Dr. Roy Herbst, the chief of medical oncology at the Yale Cancer Center in New Haven, Conn., and a spokesman for the American Association for Cancer Research.


“We do know that nicotine is an addictive substance, and that it affects blood pressure and the blood vessels. It could also have other noncancerous side effects,” Herbst said.


Jason Levine, a clinical psychologist who specializes in smoking cessation at the Source Health and Wellness Treatment Center in Los Angeles, said he had seen e-cigarette usage lead to headaches, nausea and other symptoms consistent with nicotine poisoning.


“Some people suck on their e-cigarette all day long like it’s a pacifier. You don’t have to light up, only plug it in, and you can keep smoking without a break,” he said.


5 Things You Need to Know About E-Cigarettes


Regarding suspicions about e-cigarettes causing cancer, Kiklas said these fears are also unproved. E-smoke vapor contains just five chemicals, he said, compared with the up to 9,000 chemicals that have been identified in tobacco smoke.


“The vapor is closer to regular water vapor than tobacco smoke, and poses no risk of any kind,” he said.


Citing a 2009 Food and Drug Administration report comparing traditional cigarettes with the e-cigarettes, Kiklas claimed that e-cigarettes are 1,400 times less harmful than tobacco. The flavorings and glycerin used in e-cigarettes have been consumed for generations without causing harm to humans, he said.


Most experts will admit that the scientific research conducted so far suggests that electronic cigarettes do pose a much lower cancer risk than regular cigarettes, and that in particular, they carry a greatly reduced risk of lung cancer and other cancers as well as lower risks for lung disease and heart disease. However, as Dr. Bechara Choucair, the commissioner of health for the Chicago Department of Public Health stressed, the question is far from settled.


“It is difficult to evaluate the risks, because as of now, there are no federal regulations imposed on the more than 250 e-cigarettes now on the market, which means that there currently are no restrictions on the ingredients manufacturers can or cannot use,” he said.


Until more is known about these products, limiting their use is just good common sense, Choucair said.


But Kiklas countered that more study was not necessary.


“We’ve been on the market for seven years and used by millions of people. There is no proof that a single person has been harmed by the product. There is nothing to study,” he said.


And as for the idea that e-smoking can be a gateway to more hardcore tobacco use, especially among young people, Kiklas dismissed these claims as irresponsible and misleading. He said that e-cigarettes were regulated by the FDA as tobacco products and as such, companies are forbidden to advertise or market them to children.


“I defy you to name one e-cigarette company that targets minors,” he said.


Coming in such flavors as Captain Crunch, Fruit Loops and Bubble Gum, e-cigarettes seem clearly designed to appeal to young people, many health experts say.


“When you see these flavors, it’s pretty obvious that these flavors could be attractive to kids, said Vince Willmore, a spokesman for the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids.


Willmore also said that many of the tactics used to market e-cigarettes are the same as what the tobacco companies have used to market cigarettes to kids.


“They have ads that use celebrities, race car sponsorships — they have even used cartoons,” Willmore said. “They don’t do this to just appeal to adult smokers, who they say are their main targets.”


E-smoking among young people is on the rise. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study found that nearly 1.8 million young people had tried e-cigarettes, and that the number of U.S. middle and high school student e-smokers doubled between 2011 and 2012. Levine said that up until last week, it was legal to sell e-cigarettes out of ice cream trucks in Los Angeles.


Choucair said the increase in e-smoking raises alarms, considering the products have only been available for a short time. He said the reason for Chicago’s proposed ban on their use in public places is to protect people, particularly young people, until there is conclusive evidence either way regarding the safety of the product.


Such restrictions make sense for now, Kiklas said, because they mirror other tobacco product related policies, though he opposes any outright bans. He believes that as people understand the technology better, public opinion will evolve.


“They will come to view this as an innocuous product with nothing in the vapor that is harmful or dangerous to humans,” he said.


Whether electronic cigarettes will help people quit smoking or lower their risk of tobacco-related diseases remains to be seen.


In the meantime, lung cancer remains the single greatest threat to the health of smokers, according to the American Cancer Society. In the United States, tobacco use is responsible for nearly one in five deaths, or 443,000 early deaths, each year.


To learn more about battling this preventable disease, please join Dr. Richard Besser, ABC News’ chief health and medical correspondent for a tweet chat at 1 p.m., today. Besser and the ABC health team will be joined by experts, patients and advocates from all over the country to offer the facts about preventing and treating lung cancer.


Even for Twitter newcomers, joining the conversation is easy. You can also follow the live blog that will offer additional facts and figures about lung cancer. Mobile users can link to the live blog here.



E-Cigarette Health Row Catches Fire

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

10 LITTLE-KNOWN FACTS ABOUT E-CIGARETTES

ecig6The electronic cigarette was introduced to the U.S. market in 2007 and offers the nicotine-addicted an alternative to smoking tobacco. Most “e-cigs” are similar enough in appearance to be mistaken for regular cigarettes, but one look inside and you’ll see the main difference: E-cigarettes don’t contain tobacco. Instead, there’s a mechanism that heats up liquid nicotine, which turns into a vapor that smokers inhale and exhale. Manufacturers and satisfied customers say that this nicotine vapor offers many advantages over traditional cigarette smoke. But regulatory agencies and some health experts aren’t sure. They’re asking questions about the possible side effects of inhaling nicotine vapor, as well as other health risks e-cigarettes may pose — both to users and to the public. Those calling for tight regulations on e-cigarettes claim that these devices should be deemed illegal until the proper research trials have been conducted to prove that they’re safe.


Because they contain no tobacco, e-cigarettes aren’t subject to U.S. tobacco laws, which means they can be purchased without proof of age, especially online. This raises concerns that e-cigs may be particularly appealing to kids and may encourage nicotine addiction among young people. And while manufacturers of the e-cigarette claim that it’s the cigarette you can “smoke” anywhere, regulatory agencies around the world are taking a close look at these gadgets and instituting a range of restrictions on their use.


Proponents of the e-cigarette say they feel better using the device than they did when they were smoking tobacco cigarettes, and that because the e-cigarette is reusable, it saves them money. Some praise the e-cig for helping them quit smoking. But is the e-cigarette as safe as its users — including celebrities like Katherine Heigl — believe? Is it a healthier option, or a riskier choice? And what does the FDA have to do with it? Before you consider taking up the e-cigarette habit, read on to get the facts


Electronic cigarettes are designed to look just like regular cigarettes, but there’s one major difference: You don’t need a match or lighter to use them. Instead, they hold a battery, a vaporization chamber and a cartridge filled with liquid nicotine. Puff on the device as you would a regular cigarette, and the device heats the liquid and changes it to a nicotine-filled vapor. Inhale to deliver the nicotine to your lungs, and then exhale the vapor. It looks like you’re smoking a regular cigarette, but there’s no smell, because nothing is burning.


By Susan Cassidy  - http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/smoking-cessation/digest-a-cigarette.htm



10 LITTLE-KNOWN FACTS ABOUT E-CIGARETTES

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Local electronic cigarette users provide etiquette tips







Posted on December 5, 2013 at 11:11 PM




PEARLAND, Texas — If you haven’t heard of electronic cigarettes by now — they are getting more popular by the day.


Dylan Thompson knows all about e-cigs.


He not only uses the nicotine inhalers but opened a store on Broadway Street in Pearland to sell them.


“We’re not combusting anything, “Thompson explains. “We’re heating this liquid to the point that it vaporizes and therefore we’re vapors not smokers.”


Thompson said he smoked for 25 years and this was the first thing that helped him quit.


“The second that I took my first vape, I knew it was gonna work cuz it simulates you know what I mean,” he said. “I like to blow smoke out of my face and the gum doesn’t do that.”


E-cigarettes appeal to Alex Bradley too. But it seems the trend is ahead of the etiquette when it comes to when and where to fire up.


“Personally, I try to be polite and ask others around me if it bothers them because most people don’t understand what it is,” Bradley said.


Doctors admit there’s no risk of being exposed to carcinogens because there’s no tar or tobacco.


However, the thick white vapor blown out is a bit of a mystery.


“We do not know,” said Dr. Joy Schmitz, professor of Psychiatric and Behavioral Sciences from the University of Texas. “There is not the scientific evidence to tell us about the harmful effects of second hand exposure to e-cigarette vapor or mist.”


So where is it polite to vape?


Etiquette expert Annie Cater says the best advice is to treat them like real cigarettes.


“I wouldn’t want somebody sitting next to me smoking vapors,” said Cater. “I don’t care what they’re smoking. I just don’t think it should be in a dining room.”


As for Dylan, he’s just glad something helped him kick the smoking habit.


“I smoked for 25 years, tried the patch, tried the gum — none of it worked,” he said. “This works.”






Local electronic cigarette users provide etiquette tips

Friday, December 6, 2013

E-Cigarettes Are Smoking Hot - Four Ways To Invest In Them

Electronic Cigarette Model Electronic Cigarette Model (Photo credit: planetc1)


Andrew Goodman, Contributor – Forbes Investing


12/05/2013 @ 11:59AM |1,924 views


When 57-year-old Tom Holloway turned on his e-cigarette, he got a lot more than nicotine.  The device exploded in his mouth, knocking out two teeth and leaving him with severe burns.  ”The best analogy is like it was trying to hold a bottle rocket in your mouth when it went off,” said Joseph Parker, division chief for the North Bay Fire Department in a CBS CBS +1.25% news report.


If e-cigarette companies can correct these problems and investors can get past these isolated incidents, they will find that sales of e-cigarettes are also exploding.  Euromonitor forecasts the retail sales value of e-cigarettes worldwide for 2013 at $2.5 billion.  Wells Fargo WFC +1.13% estimates that figure will top $10 billion by 2017 and Bloomberg Industries projects that sales will exceed those of traditional cigarettes by 2047.


The popularity of these new devices can be attributed to a younger generation. According to a recent Centers for Disease Control report, schools across the country are reporting an increase in e-cigarette usage, and school administrators are struggling to create policies that curb their usage or outright ban them.  With a lack of regulation on sales or advertising, e-cigarettes have been marketed as a safer alternative to tobacco products and come in flavors such as chocolate, caramel, and strawberry.


In an effort to standardize safety, it is likely that stricter regulation of e-cigarettes is coming.  A crackdown will force many e-cigarette companies out of business as they lack the resources to abide by new rules, leaving the market to the big tobacco.  As a result, the following companies have the cash flow to drive e-cigarette volume and revenue growth.


With the acquisition of Blu eCigs in 2012 Lorillard LO +0.59% (LO) became the first big tobacco company to enter the e-cigarette market.  Recently the company also acquired SKYCIG, a premium brand of e-cigarettes based in the UK.  This gives Lorillard a global presence and a leading 49% market share in the e-cigarette market.  The stock currently has a dividend yield of 4.2% and this year the company announced a $1 billion stock repurchase plan.


Phillip Morris International (PM) had taken a wait and see attitude on e-cigarettes, but on November 20th management proclaimed it “the single greatest opportunity for us” and announced its intention to enter the e-cigarette market during the second half of 2014.  The company has increased its dividend 104% and repurchased 25% of its outstanding shares since its spinoff from Altria in 2008.  Phillip Morris will continue to be aggressive in its return of capital to shareholders in 2014, committing approximately $6 billion to share repurchases and another $6 billion to dividend payments.  The stock has a dividend yield of 4.3%.


British American Tobacco (BTI) trades as American Depository Receipts (ADR’s) on the NYSE.  BTI launched its Vype e-cigarette in the UK.  It’s currently available online and is expanding to retail outlets.  The company will repurchase £1.5 billion of its own shares in 2013.  BTI also owns a 42% stake in Reynolds American (RAI) that is valued at $11.5 billion.  Reynolds launched its VUSE  e-cigarette in Colorado over the summer and is expanding across the United States.  BTI has a dividend yield of 2.7%.


Altria (MO) launched its MarkTen e-cigarette in Indiana in August and plans to expand distribution to Arizona in December.  Altria plans to retire 100 million shares by 2017 and announced a 9% dividend increase this year (5.2% yield).


 



E-Cigarettes Are Smoking Hot - Four Ways To Invest In Them

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Vapors and Emotions Rise at Hearing on E-Cigarettes




Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times

Opponents of a proposed ban on electronic cigarettes in public places puffed at a City Council health committee hearing on Wednesday.



By   Published: December 4, 2013


A woman in a skintight dress lounged in the front row of the City Council chamber on Wednesday, sucking on an electronic cigarette and blowing out sweetly scented clouds, as if she were at a nightclub. Other people in the crowd of about 200 did the same, puffing on devices like a red-tipped cigarette clone, a green glass hookah and something that looked like a black pencil with a glowing blue tip.


Unlike smoke from regular cgarettes, which would have formed a fetid smog over the room, the plumes from these cigarettes left only the most fleeting impression before evaporating. The point of the theatrical provocateurs seemed to be that e-cigarettes were innocuous and legal, and should stay that way.




But John LaSorsa, 16, a student at Tottenville High School on Staten Island, was not buying it. He swatted away the clouds, before testifying in favor of a bill that would add electronic cigarettes to the ban on smoking in most public places in New York.


“My nose and throat burns,” Mr. LaSorsa testified. “I have an extreme headache right now because I’ve been sitting behind them smoking electronic cigarettes.”


In a city where the technocratic mayor prides himself on making decisions based on the evidence, the proposed ban produced one of the most scientifically vague and emotionally charged health committee hearings in recent memory. Anyone who used the word “smoke” or “smoking” to refer to electronic cigarettes, which typically contain nicotine, was instantly corrected by audience members hissing “Vapor!” and “Vaping!”


The health commissioner, Dr. Thomas A. Farley, said electronic cigarettes were such a recent invention that he could not say whether they were hazardous to the health of those smoking them or those who might breathe in secondhand vapor. He said that they do put out fine particles and chemicals, and “I certainly can’t guarantee that that is safe.”


He said the problem with e-cigarettes was that they made smoking socially acceptable, and that they were a “bridge” for people who went back to smoking regular cigarettes.


“Does it help people quit, or does it help people not quit?” Dr. Farley asked, rhetorically.


Then Dr. Farley indulged in a bit of theater himself, fishing around in his shirt pocket, saying, “Just to give you an idea, I’ve got one here somewhere,” before pulling out an electronic cigarette that he pronounced “indistinguishable” from a real one. He and other supporters of the ban say e-cigarettes confuse people like bartenders and restaurant owners who have to enforce the existing smoking ban, making that ban harder to enforce. Advocates of e-cigarettes argued they had helped many people stop smoking regular cigarettes, including — based on a show of hands — most of the audience. E-cigarettes, which use a battery to vaporize a nicotine solution, have grown in popularity based on a perception that they are a safer smoking alternative.


Dr. Gilbert Ross, executive director of the American Council on Science and Health, which he said received some funding from the e-cigarette industry, told the committee that the proposed law was “hyper-regulatory, and it really will accomplish nothing except to make other former smokers return to toxic cigarettes.”


Spike Babaian, an owner of VapeNY, an e-cigarette store in Manhattan and Queens, said that equating regular and electronic cigarettes was silly. “We don’t ban water because it looks like vodka,” she said. Councilman Peter F. Vallone Jr. of Queens demurred. “I’m watching puffs of vapor go up in this room — it is confusing, and I smell it.” He said he had not decided how to vote.


Councilman James F. Gennaro of Queens, the prime sponsor of the bill, said the time to regulate electronic cigarettes was now. “I’m just not willing to wait for Big Tobacco to completely take over the electronic cigarette industry, and then you’ll get nothing out of Washington, because people are bought and paid for,” he said.


If the bill is not passed this month, several of its strongest advocates — the Bloomberg administration; the Council speaker, Christine C. Quinn; and Mr. Gennaro — will be out of office, leaving its fate under a new administration uncertain.


<nyt_correction_bottom>



<nyt_update_bottom>









A version of this article appears in print on December 5, 2013, on page A33 of the New York edition with the headline: Vapors Rise at City Hearing on E-Cigarettes.







Vapors and Emotions Rise at Hearing on E-Cigarettes

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

E-cigarettes: A solution to addictive smoking?



Cigarette butts150By Jacqueline Palochko, Of The Morning Call  12:27 a.m. EST, November 29, 2013


George Blandford was smoking a pack and a half of cigarettes a day and trying everything possible to stop.


After 15 years of smoking, he tried the nicotine patch, the nicotine gum and even going cold turkey.


Nothing helped.


Then he found electronic-cigarettes, a metal or plastic battery-powered device with a mix of nicotine and some kind of flavoring. Similar in size, he used it as he would while smoking a cigarette, while reading a newspaper or having his morning coffee.





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It looked and felt like smoking a cigarette, without the cancer-causing tobacco.


Five years later, Blandford is cigarette-free and trying to get other smokers to quit the same way he did with his new store, Lehigh Vapor, in Bethlehem. It’s part of a growing trend of more people, including teenagers, using the battery-powered device in place of cigarettes.


Blandford and other users say it’s safer than smoking cigarettes. No tobacco. No threat of second-hand smoke. No smoke that can seep into homes, cars and clothes.


But doctors are leery about the devices that have only been around for 10 or 15 years and do contain nicotine, which is addictive.


“We don’t know that much about e-cigarettes,” said Dr. Bruce MacLeod, president of the Pennsylvania Medical Society. “And look at all those years with cigarettes when we were told they were safe.”


The Pennsylvania Medical Society is asking the state to regulate e-cigarettes the same way it handles other tobacco products, including by taxation and banning sales to those under 18 years old. It also wants schools to include talks about e-cigarettes in tobacco education.


Blandford opened his shop in September to give smokers a way out, he said. He knew first-hand just how difficult it was to quit smoking, but for him, this method worked.


“It seemed foolish not to open one,” he said, puffing on an e-cigarette in his store that left a small cloud of smoke quickly vaporing.


Most people come into Lehigh Vapor looking for an alternative to smoking, Blandford said.


Alysha Allen of Bethlehem started smoking at 18, and although she said she was just a social smoker — maybe a pack of cigarettes a week — by 23 years old, she could hear her voice turning raspy. She recently switched to e-cigarettes and said she no longer coughs or wheezes and isn’t in pain when she gives a hearty laugh.


“I certainly feel a lot better,” she said.


For some smokers, it’s the cost of e-cigarettes that’s appealing. Greg Winnick of Wind Gap smoked for 15 years and was spending about $11 a day on cigarettes when he decided to look for a less expensive alternative. Two years ago, he discovered e-cigarettes and hasn’t smoked a cigarette since.


Now, he said, he spends probably $1 a day for e-cigarettes. Devices at Lehigh Vapor range in price from $15 to $150, and, similar to how a hookah works, users can put in a flavor of their liking. Flavors at Lehigh Vapor include banana, berry, cherry, orange, raspberry and more.


MacLeod, of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, said he has heard that e-cigarettes have helped people quit smoking, and admits e-cigarettes are most likely not as dangerous because there’s no tobacco.


“I’d characterize it as less bad,” he said.


But until more research is done, it’s best to treat e-cigarettes like tobacco-filled cigarettes, MacLeod said.





Copyright © 2013, The Morning Call




E-cigarettes: A solution to addictive smoking?

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Quit Smoking - How Cigarettes Can Abuse Your Body

By Tim Bose –


The main function that keeps us alive is breathing oxygen. The body can survive without food and fluids for several days and even weeks. However, if the body is deprived of oxygen for as little as 3 to 5 minutes it can result in brain damage or even death.


One of the main ways that smoking cigarettes can abuse the body is to diminish its capacity to breathe in the life giving oxygen our bodies need to survive. Smoking a cigarette does not mean that you will immediately suffocate and fall into a heap and die. What smoking does is gradually destroy the ability of your lungs to effectively breathe in oxygen. It does this through the smoke that is inhaled from the cigarette.


When smoke is breathed in through the many chambers and branches of the lungs it leaves a slimy sticky residue called tar along the linings of the lungs. Over time this tar builds up and the ability for the much needed oxygen to get through and be absorbed into the blood stream is greatly diminished.


No fireThe ingredients that are used in the manufacture of cigarettes contain many toxic chemicals. When these are inhaled in to the lungs the body will try its utmost to get rid of them. It is common to hear a smoker cough in the morning as soon as they get up. The coughing is a clear sign that the body is doing its utmost to expel the poisons that have come from smoking cigarettes.


The reality is that long term smoking can destroy your health and will lead to many chronic conditions and deadly diseases that include many forms of cancer, heart disease and emphysema.


Many people who smoke fool themselves into thinking those low tar cigarettes or cigarettes with filters or a healthier option. The reality is there is no such thing as a healthier or safer cigarette. They will all eventually kill you if you use them long enough. If you value your health the only effective way is to quit smoking today.


With over 3 years writing experience, Tim Bose writes about topics that fascinate him. Currently he has a new site that discusses a variety of electric treadmill brands including portable treadmill reviews and fitness accessories.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Tim_Bose
http://EzineArticles.com/?Quit-Smoking—How-Cigarettes-Can-Abuse-Your-Body&id=4926442


 


 



Quit Smoking - How Cigarettes Can Abuse Your Body

Monday, December 2, 2013

Electronic Cigarettes Affordability Adds to the Delight of Smokers


ecigElectronic cigarettes have brought changes and opportunities for more than billion smokers on earth. While several have acknowledged and accepted the electronic cigarettes there are still a few who are confused about this invention. While e-cigs have proved their efficiency over the conventional cigarettes, people are flocking the online review sire SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com for more updates. The first time users switching to the electronic cigarettes are advised to visit this site for details and information about the starter kits and brands. SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com is a well reputed and reliable website known to provide honest ratings and reviews about the e-cigs.




Deerfield Beach, FL — (SBWIRE) — 12/02/2013 – A better alternative to the ordinary cigarettes,electronic cigarettes have solid positive reasons to gain the trust of smokers worldwide. Freeing the hardcore smokers from bad and offensive smoke this Chinese invention has also spared them from the embarrassments in public.

With all the products and commodities are facing rising prices, some of the electronic products are now out of the common man’s reach. In beginning some of the people classified the electronic cigarettes in the same category but the prices of the various e-cigs brands have proved to be otherwise. Given the amount of money that the smokers are spending behind the traditional cigarettes, the e-cigs are revealed to be cheaper. Instead of investing on the age old tobacco cigarettes a large number of smokers are now moving towards the e-cigs which are completely affordable by the common man.


Breaking free from the myth of high prices, SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com brings out electronic cigarettes brands which not only suits the lifestyle but also the pocket of the buyer.


Smoking has landed several smokers on the doorsteps of doctors and is adding to the increasing pile of hospital bills. It is not surprising that given all the dangerous and harmful effects related to tobacco cigarettes millions of smokers are facing lifetime health issues. Several of the people suffering from depression and stress have found their solace in smoking and as a result the dreadful chemicals of the conventional cigarettes have resulted in cancer and several other life claiming diseases.


Electronic cigarettes are not only getting accepted at the workplaces but are also finding their way into clubs, pubs, theaters and restaurants. The main reason for this is the vapor produced by the device which is free from the ash and odor. Slowly gaining upper hand to the conventional cigarettes the e-cigs are the tomorrow.


For more updates and reviews visit http://www.smokelesscigarettebrands.com/.


About SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com

SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com is an electronic cigarette review website that reviews some of the top brands of electronic cigarettes available in the international market.


For more information about SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com contact Michael Smith at +911244110418 FREE or support@SmokelessCigaretteBrands.com, 3422 SW 15 Street, Suite #5217,Deerfield Beach, FL 33442.






Electronic Cigarettes Affordability Adds to the Delight of Smokers