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Not bad except for the price of cartridges mistake.
Not bad except for the price of cartridges mistake.
I find this paragraph from the article interesting. There are no specific references to the statement that e-cigarettes have been found less harmful than regular cigarettes after "a series of toxicological tests". What toxicological tests were done and where can these test results be found? I know of no study which has actually tested the vapor emitted by an e-smoking device.E-cigarettes have been found after a series of toxicological tests to be less harmful than regular cigarettes, but by no means harmless. Smokers will remain vulnerable to the circulatory diseases associated with nicotine, though the lack of carcinogens and toxicants will reduce the chances of lung and heart disease.
I'm not sure what's funny about the refrigerator reference. It's very true that to prevent spoilage, liquids and cartridges are refrigerated by some. And there is thought being given to requiring refrigerated shipping containers, as is the case with many food products subject to spoilage.
That wasn't meant to be a joke, Iceman. You probably just haven't read the spoilage concerns before.
Nicotine, of course, is guilty as charged in the article.
I agree, but I'm sure caffeine and any other stimulant is going to have long term effects on the circulatory system. I think the need to say these aren't harmless comes from the gut reaction to smoking that has been drilled into our heads by the health industry. The fact that gum, patches, etc. are medical devices, but as soon as it resembles a cigarette, or the name implies cigarette, everyone refuses to the word "safe". Personally I'm gonna call them zigarettes and call it zmoking when I try to sell them to my friends and family. Create some distance from that gut reaction. Tylenol has some bad long term side effects as well, don't see articles claiming it's not a safe pain management drug...
Folks, don't compare nicotine to caffeine. There's just no comparison when it comes to serious long-term health consequences.
The U.S. pioneer in harm reduction is Dr. Brad Rodu, a professor of medicine at the University of Kentucky. Rodu has for years advocated that smokers switch from cigarettes to smokeless tobacco, saving themselves from the unhealthy consequences of inhaled smoke.
My position is that alternative sources of nicotine should be considered by any smoker who is unable or unwilling to quit smoking with abstinence-only (i.e. quit-or-die) conventional approaches, Rodu wrote in answer to questions for this article. Nicotine is strongly addictive, he added, but its use is associated with virtually no adverse health risks. The model for this is caffeine, which is also addictive (although less so than nicotine), but consumed safely by millions of Americans in coffee and soft drinks.
Rodu says there has been a lot of discussion in the tobacco world about these (e-smoking devices) recently.