Editorial

Use of e-cigarettes demands regulation as trend expands among millennials

Electronic cigarettes are just the start of a potential trend in revolutionizing our generation’s bad habits. Because of this, the Food and Drug Administration should regulate e-cigarettes before they become a phenomenon.

This year, millennials make up 44 percent of e-cigarette users, according to Forbes magazine, making the e-cigarette the cigarette of Generation Y.

The similarities between e-cigarettes and traditional cigarettes are extremely worrisome.

The glamorous advertising and still unknown effects of the e-cigarette are extremely reminiscent of past generations’ ignorance about cigarettes.

E-cigarettes are convenient and possibly less harmful than normal cigarettes, but they should not be viewed as substitutes for cigarettes.



While not a tobacco-based product, the e-cigarette allows users to inhale a vaporized liquid-nicotine solution. As the product is nicotine based, addiction is probable. Also, according to the FDA, e-cigarettes may contain ingredients that are potentially toxic to humans.

Many claim they use e-cigarettes to wean themselves from cigarette use. However, they still get their nicotine fix from them.

It is irresponsible to think these e-cigarettes are safe alternatives to cigarettes, which are infamous for addiction and connections to lung cancer. Both e-cigarettes and cigarettes contain an addictive component.

Alarmingly, the number of middle and high school students who use e-cigarettes doubled between 2011-2012, according to the Center for Disease Control.

Efforts have been made to protect youths from the effects of e-cigarettes. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed two bills in September 2012 to protect New York’s adolescents from the harmful effects of e-cigarettes by prohibiting their sale to individuals under 18.

Currently, the FDA regulates e-cigs that are marketed for therapeutic purposes. However, they plan to expand the agency’s authority over tobacco products to include e-cigs. This shows progress toward defeating a possibly long-term health hazard for millennials.

Though the smoking trend may never end, technology should be used in a more beneficial manner than creating an electronic cigarette. If innovative methods to advance this generation’s risky habits continue to develop, concerns remain over what could be next.





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