He started vaping as a teen and now says habit is "impossible to let go"

A 2015 survey found nearly half of Colorado high schoolers reported that they’ve vaped

Published June 9, 2018 12:59PM (EDT)

 (Getty/6okean)
(Getty/6okean)

This article originally appeared on Kaiser Health News.

The debate over the health risks of Juul, vaping and e-cigarettes is now spilling into the public square.

In one of the most restrictive measures nationwide, San Francisco voters this week upheld by what looks to be a large majority — nearly 70 percent in a preliminary tally — a ban on the sale of flavored vaping products, as well as conventional menthol cigarettes.

Even before that, federal agencies had launched a wave of crackdowns against retailers that sell e-cigarettes, including the popular Juul brand, to minors. Public health advocates and officials worry these sales could be an emerging disaster, reversing years of declines in smoking.

E-cigarettes can be tiny — they might look like a pen or flash drive. When someone vapes, there’s no fire, ash or smoky odor. Instead, the devices heat up and vaporize a liquid or solid. And vaping appears to have taken off among young people.

“Believe it,” said Julien Lavandier, 21. “It’s a habit for me, you know — all the time, when I set down my schoolwork to do homework, take a rip of the Juul. When I get in my car, take a rip of the Juul.”

Lavandier, now a student at Colorado State University, started vaping when he was a sophomore in high school. He said he’d go to parties where it was common to smoke an e-cigarette.

“At first,” he said, “it was a lot of, you know, chasing flavors, or doing smoke tricks and that was really what impressed me. I thought, you know, this is cool, this looks like something fun.”

He said students at his high school vaped in class without teachers knowing. He estimated a quarter of his classmates were habitual e-cigarette users. Lavandier started vaping regularly and later began smoking traditional cigarettes.

When Juul arrived on the market, he took that up too, and found it habit-forming. He liked it more than marijuana or alcohol.

“It’s impossible to let go once you started using,” Lavandier said. “I’ll tell you — after even an hour and a half or two, I am chomping at the bit to find my Juul.”

Stores aren’t supposed to sell e-cigarettes to minors, but Lavandier said he has been buying them for years and was never once carded. In April, the FDA asked the firm behind Juul for documents to see if it’s intentionally marketing to underage teens.

The company has online testimonials and has built an online community around their product. In one video, a woman in her 30s named Lauren says she’s constantly “encouraging people to use this and not smoke your cigarettes.”

Representatives from Juul Labs declined repeated requests for an interview. In a written statement, the company said its product offers a “true alternative to adult smokers, not anyone else, not minors.”

Other companies that make e-liquids also say their products are not for minors. The companies do offer a wide range of sweet flavors, however, like cotton candy, caramel, cherry, cookies and milk, and crème brûlée.

“If it tastes good and a kid might get their hands on it — that’s not our goal,” said Jameson Rodgers, the VP of business development for NEwhere Inc., a California-based maker of e-cigarettes and vaping products.

“Also,” Rodgers said, “I feel like some of the responsibility has to fall on some of the parents of any kid that’s deciding to walk into an adult store, whether that’s a liquor or a tobacco store.”

The head of Colorado’s health department, Dr. Larry Wolk, said he finds it hard to believe industry claims that it isn’t marketing to kids.

“I have to call BS on that,” he said, “because the flavors are cotton candy, ‘frutti tutti’ and they have cartoon characters on their labels and you can mix flavors and strengths. It’s really appealing to kids, whether or not they are intentionally marketing to kids.”

Wolk also pointed to research that suggests youth vaping leads to traditional smoking. A January report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine made that conclusion. “Among youth — who use e-cigarettes at higher rates than adults do — there is substantial evidence that e-cigarette use increases the risk of transitioning to smoking conventional cigarettes,” the report found.

One of the benefits of e-cigarettes, according to the industry, is that the devices can help people quit their use of tobacco products. When it comes to that habit, the advice from Ray Story, the founder and CEO of the Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, is “don’t start at all.”

“But if you’re going to smoke or do e-cigarettes,” Story said, “then certainly take an e-cigarette because it’s vastly less harmful — if you consider both of them contain nicotine, and both of them are addictive. It’s vastly less harmful than conventional tobacco.”

Dr. Deborah Liptzin, a pediatric pulmonologist at Children’s Hospital Colorado, sees the evidence differently. E-cigarettes, she said, have become “the new way to get kids addicted to nicotine.” There’s been scant e-cigarette research, she noted, including on Juul and the ingredients in the e-liquids used in the devices.

“They specifically use nicotine salts,” Liptzin said. “We have no research that I could find on nicotine salts that are inhaled, because it’s so new.”

Data from the 2015 Healthy Kids Colorado Survey found that nearly half of Colorado high schoolers reported that they’ve vaped. One in 4 said they had used an e-cigarette in the previous month. That’s three times the rate of traditional cigarettes, which has raised concerns among public health officials.

“The Juul has definitely been a game changer,” said Jen Bolcoa, a health education coordinator with Jefferson County Public Schools. The tiny pod of e-liquid in a Juul has the equivalent nicotine of approximately 20 cigarettes — an entire pack — according to the company’s website.

Most educators, parents and students “don’t realize how much nicotine is in there, or that there’s even any nicotine,” she said. “That’s what the research tells us.”

Bolcoa works with students as part of the Breathe Easy team, a club at high schools backed by Jefferson County’s Tobacco-Free Youth program, to educate students, parents and administrators about the larger risks of tobacco use and Juuls. An educational video the team posted on Facebook tells viewers that “Juuls and other e-products are disguised to look like pens, flash drives.”

But their video competes with others posted by teens on social media sites. On YouTube, there’s a video called the Juul Challenge. Two guys sit in the smoke-filled front seat of a car, competing, pulling on Juuls.

“Cheers, guys. Let’s see how many hits I can do? You got five,” one of the video performers says. “How many hits can you do? Write in the comments.”

That video had more than 230,000 views, and 380 comments in seven weeks. Teresa Kenison, a volunteer on the Breathe Easy team, said social media helps drive the vaping trend. She has seen frequent use of the devices in classrooms, bathrooms and parking lots. All sorts of students are using e-cigarettes and Juuls, from those in AP classes to athletes.

“It’s really everywhere,” she said. “Students are getting hooked.”

She has noticed older kids making runs to the convenience store for younger ones.

Lavandier can attest to the power of e-cigarettes as a gateway to tobacco use. The college student said he’s now hooked on both cigarettes and e-cigarettes. He has tried to quit, but said he now can’t go three days without using a Juul. On a typical day, he’ll take upward of 300 puffs.

“So my biggest concern,” he said, “is, you know, right now I’m puffing, puffing, happy, worry-free, and then in 20 years I’ll have to explain to my kids why I’ve developed popcorn lung — or some new form of lung cancer,” Lavandier said. “Because I didn’t know what the risks were of e-cigarettes. It terrifies me.”

This story is part of a partnership that includes Colorado Public Radio, NPR and Kaiser Health News.

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