I don't understand how anyone can be leery of the study done with the grant from CASAA.
1) Dr. Burstyn, the respected researcher to whom CASAA awarded the grant, has no ties to the tobacco industry, e-cig industry or tobacco harm reduction advocacy. He is an expert in environmental air quality and epidemiology.
2) CASAA was not involved in the study other than helping provide access to the existing known studies he reviewed. We asked for his expert evaluation of the existing research and didn't know for certain what his conclusions would be until we got his final report. His research is now being reviewed for publication.
3) The idea that Dr. Burstyn would risk his reputation and possble future career - by lying or manipulating the results of something that has his name on it - for a small, relatively unknown advocacy group that gave him a grant of a measly $15k is a ridiculous notion. That suspicion may be reasonable if he got millions from a company selling e-cigs, but seriously - who would do that for $15k for several months of work? As a professor at Drexel University, its not like that's a lot of money worth risking your reputation.
4) The review has been public for a few months now and the ANTZ haven't ripped it apart over being junk and have largely pretended it doesn't exist. That tells us that they can't argue its conclusions and because of that, they don't want the public to know about it.
5) There will never be e-cigarette research funded by a 100% uninterested party. The people who fund research have a vested interest or they wouldn't spend the money. The FDA does not do research, it reviews research submitted by companies.
6) So far, the ANTZ research has found no evidence of hazards to public health, yet they write conclusions and press releases pretending their research found anything "significant." CASAA simply asked an expert to review all of the existing research to see if what the ANTZ claimed as a health risk was true. Dr. Burstyn found, using the results of the ANTZ testing, not his own, that direct inhalation of the vapor may be a small, but unlikely, health risk because we have no long-term studies of human PG inhalation. And he found NO reason why vapor would be ANY health risk to bystanders.
Its hard to accuse the CASAA study of bias when we gave our grant money to a 100% unbiased, unvested researcher, who simply evaluated all of the existing research done by other scientists.