Young Using E-Cigarettes Smoke Too, Study Finds
Middle
and high school students who used electronic cigarettes were more
likely to smoke real cigarettes and less likely to quit than students
who did not use the devices, a new study has found. They were also more
likely to smoke heavily. But experts are divided about what the findings
mean.
The
study’s lead author, Stanton Glantz, a professor of medicine at the
University of California, San Francisco, who has been critical of the
devices, said the results suggested that the use of e-cigarettes was
leading to less quitting, not more.
“The
use of e-cigarettes does not discourage, and may encourage,
conventional cigarette use among U.S. adolescents,” the study concluded.
It was published online in the journal JAMA Pediatrics on Thursday.
But
other experts said the data did not support that interpretation. They
said that just because e-cigarettes are being used by youths who smoke
more and have a harder time quitting does not mean that the devices
themselves are the cause of those problems. It is just as possible, they
said, that young people who use the devices were heavier smokers to
begin with, or would have become heavy smokers anyway.
“The
data in this study do not allow many of the broad conclusions that it
draws,” said Thomas J. Glynn, a researcher at the American Cancer
Society.
The
study is likely to stir the debate further over what electronic
cigarettes mean for the nation’s 45 million smokers, about three million
of whom are middle and high school students. Some experts worry that
e-cigarettes are a gateway to smoking real cigarettes for young people,
though most say the data is too skimpy to settle the issue. Others hope
the devices could be a path to quitting.
So far, the overwhelming majority of young people who use e-cigarettes also smoke real cigarettes, a large federal survey published last year found.
Still,
while e-cigarette use among youths doubled from 2011 to 2012, regular
cigarette smoking for youths has continued to decline. The rate hit a record low in 2013 of 9.6 percent, down by two-thirds from its peak in 1997.
The
new study drew on broad federal survey data from more than 17,000
middle school and high school students in 2011 and more than 22,000 in
2012. But instead of following the same students over time — which many
experts say is crucial to determine whether there has been a progression
from e-cigarettes to actual smoking — the study examined two different
groups of students, essentially creating two snapshots.
Dr.
Glantz says that his findings show that use of e-cigarettes can predict
who will go on to become an established smoker. Students who said they
had experimented with cigarettes — that is, taken at least one puff —
were much more likely to become established smokers if they also used
e-cigarettes, he said.
“One
of the arguments that people make for e-cigarettes is that they are a
way to cut down on the smoking of cigarettes, but the actual use pattern
is just the opposite,” he said.
But David Abrams, executive director of the Schroeder Institute for Tobacco Research and Policy Studies at the Legacy Foundation, an antismoking research group, said the study’s data do not support that conclusion.
“I
am quite certain that a survey would find that people who have used
nicotine gum are much more likely to be smokers and to have trouble
quitting, but that does not mean that gum is a gateway to smoking or
makes it harder to quit,” he said.
He
argued that there were many possible reasons that students who
experimented with e-cigarettes were also heavier smokers — for example,
living in a home where people smoke, belonging to a social circle where
smoking is more common, or abusing drugs or alcohol.
The
study did have a bright spot: Youths who used e-cigarettes were more
likely to plan to quit smoking. Dr. Abrams highlighted that finding, but
said it was impossible to tell whether students who planned to quit
actually did, because the data did not track this.
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