It’s not hard to understand why: e-Cigarettes use a heating element to turn a nicotine-infused liquid into an aerosol, with no open flame, ash, or lingering smoke. The vapes themselves are easy to conceal, and if someone needed to hide an e-cigarette from particularly perceptive parents or teachers, they can find vapes built into hoodies, fake smartwatches, and USB drives. Unlike smokeless tobacco, there’s no need to constantly spit.
Plus, the liquids often come in flavors like fruit, bubble gum, mint, and vanilla, because unflavored nicotine isn’t exactly appealing. “Huge concentrations of nicotine salts are just miserable to breathe in,” Dr. Stepp said. “Flavors are necessary to make these products palatable, and those flavors end up being a huge draw for youth users to get exposed to nicotine addiction.” Instead of the acrid odor of an ashtray, vapes might leave behind the faint whiff of a candy store or an ice cream shop.
Data on health risks of vaping still emerging
e-Cigarettes are a relatively new technology. Chinese pharmacist, Hon Lik, invented electronic nicotine delivery systems just after the turn of the millennium, with some of the first models entering the market in 2004. Smokers started turning to vapes in greater numbers by the mid-2010s. Yet nearly 20 years after the introduction of e-cigarettes, scientists still aren’t certain about the long-term harms of vaping nicotine.
Inhaling aerosolized nicotine-infused liquid has been shown to have some shorter-term health consequences, including worsening asthma, impaired performance in sports, coughing/wheezing, and behavioral health effects. In 2019, the first reported incidents of e-cigarette or vaping-associated lung injury, or EVALI, ballooned to more than 2,800 cases by 2020 (when the CDC stopped recording data) and at least 68 deaths. The median age of EVALI victims was just 24 years old.
No matter how it enters the body, nicotine makes immediate changes to the central nervous system, binding to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and upregulating new receptors, which simultaneously creates both increased tolerance and cravings for more nicotine. “One of the things that is important to keep at the forefront of the conversation is that nicotine addiction is a chronic medical disease, and it’s a form of substance abuse,” pediatrician, Susan Walley, MD, a co-author of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ recent position papers on children and smoking, said. “Substance abuse is a mental health issue.”