I made some edits.. deleted the part about fires. I think it may be better in a follow-up article, perhaps about how earth friendly e-cigs are? It saves on length too. I tried to take into account all the comments on the forum as well.... but I'm sure it could use another set of eyes.
The booth at the state fair expo was black, with big, gold lettering exclaiming, "Electronic Cigarettes - the smoking alternative!" As a tobacco smoker, I expected to laugh at the silly concept and high price. It only took a minute for me to realize that this was a revolutionary invention. And the price was reasonable too.
The seller made it clear that it was not a device intended to stop smoking. Rather, it was a much safer, cheaper way to "smoke" without producing any smoke at all - just a mist-like vapor that quickly vanishes. However, while not intended as a quit-smoking device, the e-cigarette does give the former tobacco user the ability to reduce nicotine levels in steps; from high, to medium, to low, to e-smoking liquid that contains no nicotine at all. This, for myself and my husband, was an appealing way to wean off nicotine altogether.
There is no scientific proof that they are safer, but it doesnt take a medical degree to see that the absence of smoke, tar and a few thousand other ingredients, make the flavored nicotine liquid seem tame by comparison. One of the most appealing aspects of the device is that the liquids are available in many dosages of nicotine, from 55mg to 0mg. This easily allows users to wean themselves from nicotine altogether
Of course, as soon as I got my new device home, I had to go online and see what I could find out about them.
The first thing I found was that there was an entire range of different devices and liquids available. It was clear not all of the products are created equal. Online, a whole subculture has quickly built up around the new phenomenon of "vaping", the term coined by electronic cigarette users to differentiate from smoking. Many users also prefer the term "personal vaporizer" as it produces a fine mist or vapor instead of smoke. Within this subculture, tobacco cigarettes are called "analogs". Vapers often consider themselves "smoke-free" or "non-smokers" because they have broken away from smoking and most of the negative aspects of tobacco cigarettes.
"I feel free of cigarettes for the first time in my life," said James Solie., of Hudson, WI. Solie said his life changed in many ways since he quit smoking.
"I used to go to bed at night and could smell the smoke on myself, and it wasn't good. I don't miss that. I just feel better in every way imaginable. I breathe better, don't have that nasty congestion in the morning. My throat feels better. My sense of smell, thus taste is much better." Solie adds that his wife is also happy that he has quit smoking.
The perception of electronic cigarette users, that they are no longer smokers, is difficult for non-smokers and smoke-free advocates to understand. Many of them have welcomed recent news of the FDA ban on certain electronic cigarette brands, due to safety concerns. Municipalities in New York, Connecticut, and Oregon proposed bans on their use in public spaces. Electronic cigarette users fear the public has been falsely led to believe that personal vaporizers aren't any different than tobacco cigarettes.
"Because vaping looks like smoking, people immediately associate the two and come to a bad conclusion," said Scott Brower, of Santa Clarita, CA. Brower said he was not a cigarette smoker, but now enjoys nicotine-free electronic pipes and cigars. "They need to be educated to understand the fundamental differences."
Brower said, about the FDA report, "The announcement was rushed and omitted critical details. What should have been a scientific process and conclusion felt more political and reactionary. While I applaud their recognition of vaping and the need for testing, I also have to admonish their lack of care and due process. The FDA serves a critical role and I want them to take a very hard look at vaping. However, they must follow the scientific method to the letter if they are to fulfill their purpose. Given the potential significance of this to real tobacco users, and their fair and accurate treatment of this is literally life and death for millions."
Browers response was typical of many vaporizer users. There was shock and disbelief at the publics and governments knee-jerk reaction. It was hard for vapor advocates to understand the logic in allowing the sale and use of tobacco cigarettes, which are proven to cause cancer, while the FDAs own research found only traces of adverse ingredients in electronic cigarettes. The results were based on incomplete data, as Bower points out, collected from only a few samples out of hundreds of different liquids and cartridges available on the market.
Dr. Michael Siegel, a professor at Boston University School of Public Health and a specialist in preventative health, commented in his blog, "With the FDA now approving the sale and marketing of conventional cigarettes, it is absurd to think that the Agency would spend so much of its energy on an attempt to remove this much safer alternative from the market, while ignoring the very real threat posed by the cigarettes being smoked by 45 million Americans. While further testing of electronic cigarettes is certainly warranted, and while restrictions on the sales of these products to minors and the types of marketing claims that can be made are reasonable," he stated, "it would be criminal to take these products off the market. Smokers who have found these products to be a life-saver, allowing them to stay off regular cigarettes, should be permitted to have the choice of continuing to use the product while more definitive studies are conducted."
Other physicians agree with his conclusions.
Just a few days before she started using a personal vaporizer, Julie Williams of Manchester, TN had a blood pressure reading of 230/110 and her heart rate was elevated.
"I was on medication but it wasn't working," she recalled. "Within a week of vaping and only smoking 2-3 cigarettes a day, all my numbers went down to normal ones. My primary care doctor and cardiologist both contribute the change to me stopping smoking and vaping [instead]. Both doctors are telling other patients about e-cigs."
She said she is currently done smoking tobacco cigarettes altogether. "Both my primary care physician and my cardiologist are behind me 100% in my vaping. I even vape in the exam rooms while we discuss my ongoing treatments."
Her doctors don't seem too concerned about alleged "second-hand vapor" either, unlike a few legislators and anti-smoking groups across the country. One group in Suffolk County, NY, sponsored by Majority Leader Jon Cooper (D-Lloyd Neck), banned e-cigarette use in public spaces.
"There is no substantial evidence that these devices do any harm to the user or bystanders around the user," argued Spike Babaian, of Long Island, NY, in a recent press release. "Despite the plethora of evidence provided to the Suffolk County legislature, that shows evidence that these devices are no more harmful that consuming a hot dog, they have determined that the stress, fear and confusion which the public could potentially feel due to the presence of the fog, was sufficient reason to force vapers to follow the Suffolk County smoking ordinance and utilize these devices only in areas where smoking is allowed."
"This restriction would push thousands of non-smoking Suffolk County residents who utilize nicotine vaporizers into smoking areas where they would be exposed to the second hand smoke and toxic chemicals that they quit smoking to avoid. This is a clear violation of the civil rights of non-smokers who wish to avoid the toxic chemicals given off by cigarette smoke. This law was passed based on public fear, rather than fact, and the total disregard for the safety of these former smokers is an unjustifiable disgrace. Suffolk Countys Health and Human Services Committee, which is supposed to protect the health of Suffolk County residents, has put psychological discomfort of the minority ahead of physical health and that is an unforgivable offense."
Aside from putting electronic cigarette users back into toxic cloud produced by tobacco smoke, personal vaporizer users point out that their vapor doesnt behave in the same manner as cigarette smoke. The vapor doesnt appear to travel more than a couple of feet from the user. It also tends to dissappate quicker than smoke, making it fairly undetectable and unobtrusive for those nearby, so presenting the two as the same thing is misleading.
In addition to the second-hand vapor, legislators and anti-smoking groups such as ASH, the national anti-smoking group Action on Smoking and Health, argue that the electronic cigarettes were being marketed to appeal to children, specifically through fruit and candy-like flavors. Such claims leave a bad taste in vapers mouths.
I didn't know that once I grew up I had to stop liking things that taste good, said a confused Julie Williams. You can get the (nicotine) gum in a number of flavors and they are out in the open for any kid to grab. What is a kid going to choose to buy...an ecig that they have to save up to buy online ($50 and up for a starter kit) or a pack of cigarettes they can get anywhere for $5.00?
Ed Corcoran, of Lowell, MA, is equally shocked by the allegations. I think that's ludicrous, he says. Many alcohol products have sweet, fruity flavors. No one accuses those manufacturers of marketing their products to children based on that criteria. Just because something is meant for adults only, that doesn't mean it has to taste bad.
Others counter that many children get access to cigarettes because of the low cost or sneaking cigarettes from a parent something that is impossible to do unnoticed with a personal vaporizer. And even if a child decided to spend over $100 on equipment and liquid refills and lie about their age to obtain it, what reason would they have to order a fruity flavor filled with nicotine? Nicotine produces no "rush" or high for a non-smoker and the liquids are available nicotine-free, with the same effect. The accusation holds no credibility and defies logic.
Many proponents of personal vaporizers suspect that the bad press and the misrepresented research results are occurring for financial gain. Simple internet research reveals that this can be easily supported
ASH, one of the loudest opponents to electronic cigarettes and often a source of exaggerated or false propoganda, reportedly receives huge contributions from Pfizer Inc., the maker of numerous nicotine replacement drugs designed to assist smokers with quitting cigarettes. One of their products is Chantix, already known by the FDA to have been related to 78 deaths, 28 of which were suicides. Yet the FDA has not banned that particular smoking cessation product and is going after electronic cigarettes, which have thus far not had any reported adverse effects or related deaths.
If e-cigarettes really take off, they represent a huge threat to the profits of pharmaceutical companies, and in turn, they represent a threat to future funding of ASH, explains Dr. Siegel. This conflict of interest is significant, but ASH has failed to disclose it in any of its statements about the dangers of electronic cigarettes. Each of the other anti-smoking groups which have warned the public about the dangers of e-cigarettes is also heavily funded by Big Pharma. Is this merely a coincidence? I think not.
While reputable electronic cigarette manufacturers and resellers dont advertise their product as a smoking cessation device, it is hard to ignore the anecdotal evidence. Electronic cigarettes end up being just that for tobacco smokers who begin using the devices, many of whom switch exclusively to personal vaporizers. It is common knowledge that most FDA-approved medical alternatives are dismal failures, with about a 14% success rate, even in clinical trials.
"The drugs are approved because they've shown in FDA studies that they're better than placebo," said Dr. Edward Levin, a psychopharmacological researcher at Duke University Medical Center in Raleigh, N.C.. "But being better than placebo doesn't take a whole lot, so there really is room for improvement."
A University of Wisconsin study showed that the most successful drug, Chantix, only had a 50% success rate during 12 weeks of use. That success dropped to one in four in the weeks after the treatment was stopped.
By contrast, a survey of personal vaporizer users on an electronic cigarette support site shows that 79% of respondents indicated that they have successfully quit smoking tobacco cigarettes. Some continue to use nicotine doses, others have reduced or eliminated the nicotine altogether. They feel that the gradual reduction of nicotine intake, with a familiar and comforting delivery system, allows them to immediately remove the known dangers of cigarette smoke while weaning off the nicotine.
Some may even continue to use the devices purely for recreational use, even with the nicotine. They see no difference in enjoying their nicotine alternative, like others who enjoy recreational use of alcohol, caffine or chocolate. Personal vaporizers give them a way to do this without affecting those around them, as cigarette smoke did. Nicotine is a legal substance and adults should be allowed to enjoy it responsibly, users argue.
Dawn Brain, of Smith Mountain Lake, VA, didnt start using personal vaporizers to quit smoking, but because she only wanted a lower cost alternative.
I didn't start using them for health reasons, she said. I decided to try [personal vaporizers] because I was tired of the cost of cigarettes going up. When the price of the brand I was smoking went from $23 to $35 in one week I was fed up. If I had not had PVs to turn to I would have kept smoking and just grumbled about the fact that my cost went up by 50% over night, but this time I had an option and I jumped on it.
Added to the cost benefit, I liked the fact that my house and clothes would no longer smell like cigarettes and I wouldn't be putting 35 cigarette butts into the landfill daily. I no longer have to worry about my cats knocking over my ashtray and having to clean up ashes and butts.
It never occurred to me that I would feel so much better, be able to breathe deeply for the first time in 23 years, and be able to taste things that had lost much of their flavor from my smoking, said Brain.
Electronic cigarettes may save many lives, providing the FDA doesnt make them illegal. Responsible vaporizer owners are mystified about the reactions to the revolutionary device, and hope that as the public becomes more knowledgeable, they will be more positively received.