Good news for a change.

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dherrington

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Mar 15, 2013
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Hi. I was researching academic journals to see what they had to say about the safety or usefulness of vaping. This is a little long, but worth reading. It's an abstract that found that ecigs are more effective for quitting smoking than the nicotine patch. (A useless invention by the way.)

Background: Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes or electronic nicotine delivery systems [ENDS]) are electrically powered devices generally similar in appearance to a cigarette that deliver a propylene glycol and/or glycerol mist to the airway of users when drawing on the mouthpiece. Nicotine and other substances such as flavourings may be included in the fluid vaporised by the device. People report using e-cigarettes to help quit smoking and studies of their effects on tobacco withdrawal and craving suggest good potential as smoking cessation aids. However, to date there have been no adequately powered randomised trials investigating their cessation efficacy or safety. This paper outlines the protocol for this study. Methods/design: Design: Parallel group, 3-arm, randomised controlled trial. Participants: People aged =18 years resident in Auckland, New Zealand (NZ) who want to quit smoking. Intervention: Stratified blocked randomisation to allocate participants to either Elusion™ e-cigarettes with nicotine cartridges (16 mg) or with placebo cartridges (i.e. no nicotine), or to nicotine patch (21 mg) alone. Participants randomised to the e-cigarette groups will be told to use them ad libitum for one week before and 12 weeks after quit day, while participants randomised to patches will be told to use them daily for the same period. All participants will be offered behavioural support to quit from the NZ Quitline. Primary outcome: Biochemically verified (exhaled carbon monoxide) continuous abstinence at six months after quit day. Sample size: 657 people (292 in both the nicotine e-cigarette and nicotine patch groups and 73 in the placebo e-cigarettes group) will provide 80% power at p = 0.05 to detect an absolute difference of 10% in abstinence between the nicotine e-cigarette and nicotine patch groups, and 15% between the nicotine and placebo e-cigarette groups. Discussion:

This trial will inform international debate and policy on the regulation and availability of e-cigarettes. If shown to be efficacious and safe, these devices could help many smokers as an alternative smoking cessation aid to standard nicotine products.[ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
 

Whosback

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Mar 23, 2013
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Well I've looked at the numbers and here is what I see. At best the patches, gums, inhaler and killer pill have a 7% success rate. At it''s worst rating PVs have a 30% success rate. Now I'm not a mathematician (turns out I can't even spell it), but there appears to be a slight difference in those numbers.

Also keep in mind that the failure rate of e-cig is also effected by the fact that most didn't really commit to e-cigs till we found setups we liked or at least quality ones and there is a lot of cheap junk out there. If everyone who tried e-cigs was able to start on quality kits rather then some of the cheap junk many of us do you would probably see a much higher rate of success.
 

fabricator4

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Mar 24, 2013
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Is there a link to the actual study?

That's not the study, it's just a paper outlining the protocols for such a study.

I've come across references to a study being done in Australia this year eg E-cigarette | Personal vapouriser | clinical trial however actual information on this is hard to come by. I did find one reference that the study was being done by Queensland University, however I can't find that reference any more.

I also can't find out what department in the University it is, or any of the people who may be involved. It doesn't seem to have a net presence at this time at all. I guess we'll get to know more when results start to come in.
 
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