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Smoking Cessation

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meow2u3

(24,960 posts)
Mon Dec 21, 2015, 10:01 PM Dec 2015

E-Cigs' Inconvenient Truth: It's Much Safer to Vape (long read) [View all]

Daniel Walsh was first drawn to electronic cigarettes for the same reason millions of smokers have taken up the devices. "I was a guy who could work 20 hour days and juggle a number of complex projects, but I couldn't quit," says Walsh. "It was my greatest deficit." The quixotic promise that have made e-cigs the subject of endless controversy — that smoking cessation and smoking as recreation can coexist — resonated with Walsh. After successfully making the switch, he was so enamored by the product that he left his job developing artificial intelligence in San Francisco, decamped to Michigan and launched Purebacco, a manufacturer of the flavored, nicotine-laced liquid that are battery-heated into an inhalable vapor inside e-cigs. With over 30 employees, satellite offices in San Francisco and London, and plans to expand into a 40,000-square-foot headquarters, Purebacco's growth is a microcosm of the industry as a whole, which is estimated to do $3.5 billion in sales this year. "There is so much anecdotal evidence out there supporting the idea that people like me have helped hundreds of thousands of smokers quit," says Walsh, who is known to colleagues as the High Priest of Vaping, a fitting nickname for an enigmatic scientist with a mane of blond dreadlocks who works long hours in his sleek laboratory. "Yet as an e-cig CEO, I'm not really supposed to say that, since current rules prohibit us from marketing our products as anything but another vice."

In August, when British health officials released what was billed as a "landmark review" of electronic cigarettes, Walsh savored a moment of vindication. Describing the devices in headline-grabbing language — "around 95 percent safer than smoking" — the study encouraged e-cigs to be labeled as an effective means of helping smokers curb and kick the deadly habit: a nicotine delivery system with the "potential to make a significant contribution to the endgame for tobacco," as the report boldly stated, that should be embraced as a public health breakthrough rather than shunned as a novel evil undermining the crusade against smoking. "It was what I've been preaching for years!" says Walsh. "Maybe we're seeing a shift where people like me don't sound so fringe and crazy."

In England, perhaps. In America, the dominant message regarding e-cigs is that they are a menace. They have been placed under similar restrictions as tobacco products in the U.S., despite the fact that they contain no tobacco, long understood to be the source of the carcinogens that make smoking the leading cause of preventable death worldwide. Campaigns by anti-smoking groups have successfully fostered the perception that the risks of e-cigs are interchangeable from ordinary cigarettes, and the mainstream media has largely followed in step, with much of the reporting on e-cigs focused on the sensational (exploding devices!) and the apocalyptic (worse than tobacco!). What makes this all particularly confounding is that most American public health officials agree with the core claim of the British report: namely, that puffing an e-cig is significantly less harmful than a tobacco cigarette. Maybe not a provocative 95 percent safer — the research remains spotty, open to interpretation, and e-cigs are too new to be the subject of any longitudinal studies — but at the very least free of the most pernicious toxins released when tobacco is burned. So why the reluctance to make this clear, when 480,000 Americans die from smoking each year?

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/e-cigs-inconvenient-truth-its-much-safer-to-vape-20151221#ixzz3v0zFloBM
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Take that, nicotine nazis!

15 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I stopped smoking before vaping appeared but... TreasonousBastard Dec 2015 #1
And how many don't die from smoking each year? rationalcalgarian Dec 2015 #2
You do understand, I hope, that your grandfather's living to 95 PoindexterOglethorpe Aug 2016 #9
I think we agree in principle rationalcalgarian Sep 2016 #10
19 days now cigarette free. Cassiopeia Feb 2016 #3
Great for you meow2u3 Feb 2016 #4
I started at 12mg Cassiopeia Feb 2016 #5
I started at 24 and went to 18 a month later meow2u3 Feb 2016 #6
I've looked into rebuildable Cassiopeia Feb 2016 #7
Have at least 3 devices on hand meow2u3 Feb 2016 #8
ecigs dillydally2510 Oct 2016 #13
ecigs dillydally2510 Oct 2016 #14
Interesting TheFa11en Sep 2016 #11
ecigs dillydally2510 Oct 2016 #12
I was at 3 packs a day, and wished my cigs were as long as Pinocchio's nose on a bad day angstlessk Jan 2017 #15
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