E Cigarette
- HealthYahoo Life
Teens develop respiratory problems within 30 days of using e-cigarettes, new study finds. Experts say this is a wake-up call.
Experts explain that e-cigarette use among teens isn't harmless and can quickly cause respiratory problems, according to a new study.
4 min read - LifestyleYahoo Life
Texas man dies in freak accident after e-cigarette explodes in his face
The vape pen the man was using tore his carotid artery when it exploded. He was just weeks away from his 25th birthday.
- NewsYahoo Life
Teen suffers respiratory failure after just three weeks smoking e-cigarettes
Why vaping could put you in the ICU.
- NewsAmy Rushlow
Teens Who Try E-Cigs More Likely to Start Smoking
Teens who try electronic cigarettes may be more than twice as likely to progress to traditional cigarettes as their peers who haven’t used the devices, a recent U.S. study finds.
- NewsAmy Rushlow
E-Cigarette Ads Target Millions of Teens, Govt. Says
The U.S. government is criticizing electronic cigarette manufacturers for targeting teens. Companies spent $115 million to advertise e-cigarettes in 2014. (Photo: Getty Images)
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Adolescent E-Cigarette Use Tied to Breathing Problems
“Among never smoking adolescents, e-cigarette users are twice as likely to report respiratory symptoms than non-users.” Adolescents who reported using e-cigarettes were about 30 percent more likely to report respiratory symptoms than those who never used e-cigarettes, in a study from China. The increased risk of breathing problems — like a cough or phlegm — varied depending on whether or not the adolescents also smoked traditional cigarettes. “Among never smoking adolescents, e-cigarette user
- NewsJennifer Gerson Uffalussy
Liquid Nicotine Companies Co-Opt Popular Candy and Cereal Brands to Target Kids
Now cigarette advertising is heavily regulated by government agencies. A newly released report from the bipartisan child welfare lobbying group First Focus found that poison control centers reported a 1,296 percent increase in exposure to liquid nicotine from 2011 to 2014, with more than half of those incidents involving children under the age of 6. “The lack of federal regulation of e-cigarettes has created a ‘Wild West’ where children’s favorite cereal spokescharacters are now selling them t