A sweeping research review says that e-cigarettes likely contribute to cancer risk, based on biomarker, animal, and mechanistic data — but definitive evidence could take many more years.
Nationwide, young people aged 18-24 are the heaviest users of e-cigarettes, with 38.4% of youth reporting habitual use.
On September 24, 2019, Massachusetts became the first start to ban all vaping products, including devices containing nicotine, tobacco, and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). Gov. Charlie Baker “called for a ...
It's another reason to stop vaping in the new year. According to research, vaping, like smoking, has an immediate negative effect on the user’s blood flow — even if the vape does not contain any ...
Q: Can vaping cause cancer? And is vaping any safer than smoking traditional cigarettes? The modern electronic cigarette, or ...
As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration continue to investigate the outbreak of lung injury associated with e-cigarettes, surveys show a record ...
A recent study suggests that vaping is much less harmful than smoking. The authors and the journal that published the paper tried to minimize this result. Do they have an anti-vaping bias?
In 2019, The Journal of the American Heart Association published a study suggesting that nicotine vaping doubles the risk of a heart attack. The authors claimed e-cigarette use is "independently" ...
(WNDU) - Since their debut, vapes have only gotten more and more popular, especially among young people! According to the National Youth Tobacco Survey, more than 3,000,000 middle and high school ...
Some of the most common reasons teens vape include boredom, experimentation, relaxation, taste and weight loss, according to a new study from The Institute for Social Research at the University of ...
TAKES US INSIDE HIS LAB. >> DR. MATTHIAS SALATHE SPENDS A LOT OF TIME WITH E-CIGARETTES. >> THE NOTION WAS ITS SAFE AND WE DID NOT BELIEVE THIS. >> THAT DISBELIEF IS WHAT LEAD HIM TO DEVELOP THIS ...