I just hope they don't ban all phone numbers that end with 867-5309. You know, just to be sure they get the right one.![]()
Hi... is Jenny there?
I just hope they don't ban all phone numbers that end with 867-5309. You know, just to be sure they get the right one.![]()
You forgot about all of the many higher nicotine levels.. I do 18mg, some people do 24mg, etc.... (I used to do 36). Also the different concentration combinations of PG/VG and 100% of either. They can't possibly require one for each of those possible scenarios, could they? Maybe just a smaller "add on" for each minor variation? (most of the information would be identical).
... Maybe just a smaller "add on" for each minor variation? (most of the information would be identical).
The other issue for juice manufacturers is do you go through the whole process when there is no assurance whatsoever that refillable products will even be approved. Not much point of it’s all closed systems.
How can a Bottled e-Liquid be PMTA-ed if you Can't define How it is going to be used?
This is a federal agency. Do you really expect any of this to be logical?
Hello Eskie,@100%VG sorry to just pull that out, but excising from the quote would've been tough.
Thanks, but now I'm confused. Seems like there are tons of new and cheaper somewhat no-name cigarette brands. Some mimic brands like Marlboro Light and Winston, plus other Menthol brands, including some that are just what they are; a new cheaper pack of cigarettes, but with what seems like even more additives. They cost a good bit less than brands like Marlboro Light and Winston. IIRC, this started with Dorel. If you are telling me that all of those brands have been out since before that 2007 thing, then OK, but it seems like new ones are still popping up here and there.The answer is we do. If we were on the market in 2007, just like every cigarette brand out there, we would be grandfathered in and not subject to this. But we weren't so we are subject to it. So is BT, which is why they have not been able to release a new brand since 2007, as it would require FDA approval via a PMTA, and we know that will never be granted. So same umbrella, we just came late to the party.
So then what I'm hearing from this is that, this means they are not associated with Tobacco Products, being Pharma products, and therefore need no Nicotine Warning label. Right?Those [Nicoderm CQ patches and other NRTs] are FDA approved smoking cessation products. They took the even more arduous drug pathway though the FDA.
Something made here in 2007? In that case, it must be something much like the original e-cig design by Hon Lik in China, created some time in 2003. According to Google, e-cigarettes, invented by Hon Lik, were introduced to the American market in 2007, so since his was not developed here, unless he also Patented it here, it must be some kind of early change(s) made to his design. Sound about right? If so, something like that would be useless to nearly everyone. I could not stop smoking with a cig-a-like!!!New BT products must go through exactly the same process, unless they have a grandfathered "predicate" product to which they are "substantially equivalent", in which case an SE application must still be filed, which details the exact changes from the predicate product. Unfortunately, it looks like there are no grandfathered vape products available to use as predicates. The FDA claims there is one, but won't divulge what it is.
Some of the questions I asked came from side comments made in Live YouTube videos by Matt Culley. He did not comment on most of them, but I wrote them down and remembered them. But Philip Morris and Altria are moving forward with it here now. I guess that's where the confusion came from. Thanks!It took more that two years for the IQOS PMTA to be approved. I would hardly call that "quick".
I already knew this, but thanks.Because those are cannabis products, not tobacco products. Cannabis is still an illegal, Schedule 1 drug at the federal level. The Tobacco Control Act requires the FDA to regulate tobacco products. Nothing in federal law gives the FDA the power to regulate any cannabis product.
As the only tobacco product that's now able to claim (advertise?) that it's safer than smoking, I think Swedish Match may just have a winner on its hands.I Don't really see SNUS catching on anymore than it is Already. Which is Fractionally Small.
Maybe. But if it's made by GlaxoSmithKline, you know it's gonna be stupid expensive.
As the only tobacco product that's now able to claim (advertise?) that it's safer than smoking, I think Swedish Match may just have a winner on its hands.
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OK, maybe not at first. I'll grant you that much, but again, if CDC had really wanted to know what the cause(s) of the lung illnesses and deaths was(were), they would have been taking and examining blood samples all along, or at least once they started finding out about dead people, and they would have then required this same blood testing of the medical community, since they did not at first, or least should have once they learned about Deaths! But they did not do this themselves at any point and they did not require it of the medical community at any point. If they were really doing their job(s), they would be doing the job as thoroughly as possible, and doing it to the furthest extent possible, that is, if they really wanted to know! But they did not and they have not.I am certainly no fan of how the CDC has acted in this particular situation, as I've posted elsewhere.
However, just because they now have data on cases back to March 31 does not mean they were aware of it and studying then --- it just means they are doing their jobs and working with the medical community in backtracking admissions/records for clinically relevant cases to attempt to determine timing, location(s), and spread of the outbreak.
I wasn't commenting on your entire post --- and, as I said, I've been critical of the CDC elsewhere on this forum. I was only pointing out and attempting to shed light on one piece of misinformation you were claiming in your post --- misinformation serves no one, whether it comes from the CDC, the media, or from you. Move on or don't, that's up to you....
What is it about this that you cannot see? What is it about this that you cannot agree with?… In it's totality, not one simple case of a statement made about "since March 31"?
If you cannot see this, or don't agree with this, then there is nothing left to say or talk about with you. Sorry, but that's all you'll get from me. I'm moving on now.
It seems that they can and might! I have no idea how FDA might handle "minor variations", etc., and while most of it may be the same, it seems that anything at all different about one from the next, for the same juice flavor, actually could be considered as being different products, requiring more PMTAs (or processes) to cover all of them. While it would be great if a small variance was considered in a lesser process, FDA has not made it clear how differences will be handled. At least not from what I've heard. However, I am no expert here!You forgot about all of the many higher nicotine levels.. I do 18mg, some people do 24mg, etc.... (I used to do 36). Also the different concentration combinations of PG/VG and 100% of either. They can't possibly require one for each of those possible scenarios, could they? Maybe just a smaller "add on" for each minor variation? (most of the information would be identical).
The fact remains that CDC includes the first date, in this chart, as March 31, so I did as well. How can this be considered false information? It's on CDC's chart and CDC said so themselves. All I did was point out the fact that CDC has been aware of the issue since March 31, and if they did not start studying it then, they should have. That's what they are supposed to do to protect us, is it not? Especially since they have been studying and researching it since then, or at least soon after, yet to this day, nearly 7 months later, they continue to say that the cause or causes have not been determined. Sorry if you have an issue with me, but I have an issue with them. You said you do, too, so what's the problem?I wasn't commenting on your entire post --- and, as I said, I've been critical of the CDC elsewhere on this forum. I was only pointing out and attempting to shed light on one piece of misinformation you were claiming in your post --- misinformation serves no one, whether it comes from the CDC, the media, or from you. Move on or don't, that's up to you.
The fact remains that CDC includes the first date, in this chart, as March 31, so I did as well. How can this be considered false information? It's on CDC's chart and CDC said so themselves. All I did was point out the fact that CDC has been aware of the issue since March 31, and if they did not start studying it then, they should have....
Like I said, they now have data going back to March 31 --- that doesn't mean they were aware of anything at that time. They have been getting back-data from hospitals/clinicians reviewing earlier admissions/case histories --- working back in time is part and parcel of epidemiological work. I once published a paper using data from epigenetic dental traits of ancient Egyptians ... if I knew so much 3,000 years ago, why did I wait so long to tell anyone?
Seems like there are tons of new and cheaper somewhat no-name cigarette brands. Some mimic brands like Marlboro Light and Winston, plus other Menthol brands, including some that are just what they are; a new cheaper pack of cigarettes, but with what seems like even more additives. They cost a good bit less than brands like Marlboro Light and Winston. IIRC, this started with Dorel. If you are telling me that all of those brands have been out since before that 2007 thing, then OK, but it seems like new ones are still popping up here and there.