I smoked for more than 40 years and have finally been able to quit thanks to these devices. In the past I had tried all of the officially approved methods to quit smoking, including the patch, gum, buproprion, lozenges and Chantix (now there is a dangerous product) but I never quit wanting to smoke, and I always started up again as soon as I was under stress. This time I haven’t wanted to smoke again, despite several very stressful events in my life.
My doctors are happy about this. I am breathing better than I have in decades. I am also a lot safer, since I have nerve damage that makes it hard to hold onto things, and dropping my personal vaporizer won’t start a fire.
I wish that there was more research being done, but as I am sure you know, research takes money and time. For a quick listing of some of the recent studies from around the world I would suggest he start with The Ultimate List of E-Cig Studies: Are E-Cigs Actually Safe? at
Vaping Reviews, Tips, and Guides. Yes, the site could be considered a biased source, but the science cited is not. There are also new and positive studies coming out of Europe.
I regret the fact that the big tobacco companies are taking over what has been an independent industry, and I am afraid that many of the regulations being proposed will drive the mom and pop businesses that produce and sell these products out of business. What was a relatively niche market just a decade ago is now a two billion dollar industry. Personal vaporizers that take a variety of liquids seem to be much more effective for many people than the closed system “cig-a-likes” being promoted by the tobacco companies. The regulations as proposed would limit the choices, and thus the usefulness, of these products.
The many flavors, colors and styles are being marketed to adults. If adults didn’t appreciate flavored products there would be no use for any alcohol other than plain grain spirits, would there? Let alone the mint and fruit flavors that nicotine gum and lozenges come in. I participate on the Electronic Cigarette Forum, and most of the adults there prefer sweet flavors. I have also seen pictures there of Hello Kitty themed devices posted by the adults who chose and use them.
Yes, I’m still a nicotine user, but nicotine is not the cause of the health problems caused by cigarettes. This has been shown in the studies of the pharmaceutical nicotine replacement products. E-cigarettes have the potential to help a lot of people who haven’t been able to quit smoking with the methods previously available to finally manage it. This is not a minimal benefit, it is a major one.
Appropriate regulations could include limiting sales to adults (but not limiting internet sales - I live in a rural area and am disabled - I buy most products through the internet), requiring disclosure of the ingredients in nicotine liquid and requiring that sellers offer the option of child resistant packaging - though please, not making that the only option, since those can be impossible for those of us who are older and/or disabled to use.
Inappropriate regulations include reducing the choices for flavors, requiring childproof packaging on all liquids, limiting the choices of equipment, and requiring separate testing of nicotine products that contain the same, limited number of ingredients - propylene glycol, vegetable glycerine, nicotine and food safe flavors.
The proposed FDA regulations would deem personal vaporizers to be tobacco products. Nicotine gums, patches, lozenges and sprays also contain nicotine and are not considered tobacco products.
Proposed regulations only permit products which were being marketed as of Feb. 15, 2007, to be "grandfathered," which means they would not be required to undergo a rigorous and expensive approval process. However, I know of no product now on the market which existed on or before that date.
John Boehner, Speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy, Majority Leader, and Fred Upton, Chairman of the Energy & Commerce Committee, have written a letter to the FDA asking that the date be moved to either April 2014 or the date the final rule is published. This would definitely make more sense than using a date before electronic cigarettes were available in their current forms.