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This article was published 2 year(s) and 2 month(s) ago

E-cigarette brands exploiting loophole to get into kids’ hands

Guest Commentary

March 27, 2023 by Guest Commentary

Anthony Carothers

 

A few years ago, parents and teachers were facing a new threat as e-cigarettes began showing up in classrooms and school lockers. While smoking cigarettes has thankfully become less popular among youth, fruity flavored “vapes” became the trendy new teenage accessory as they spread like wildfire throughout the United States.

Fighting back against the dangerous new epidemic of nicotine vape addiction, our elected officials banned flavored e-cigarettes, but a more dangerous product slipped through the cracks and is getting kids hooked.

Disposable e-cigarettes made in China by companies such as Puff Bar and Elf Bar have exploited a loophole in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulation.

They’re sold in kid-friendly flavors at reasonable prices and can be found on store shelves in our communities.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2.5 million middle and high school students reported using e-cigarettes last year. More than 50 percent of youth vapers reported using disposables, with Puff Bar owning almost 15 percent of the market as the top choice for teens.

Some of these manufacturers have been caught loading their products with illegal levels of nicotine to make them even more addictive.

When you look at the cartoon character packaging and flavors such as cherry pomegranate, you can see right away that manufacturers are marketing to youth. They’re even sold in disguises that look like sippy cups or school supplies to escape detection from educators.

How can this happen if flavored vapes are illegal?

To start, the FDA left the door open for disposables in its enforcement guidelines. But more problematic is that many of these products are being smuggled into our country.

Illegal vapes have been found smuggled across our southern border from Mexico.

Shenzhen, China, has become known as “Vapor Valley,” since it produces 90 percent of all e-cigarettes in the world.

The U.S. International Trade Commission estimates that more than 700 million disposable e-cigarettes were imported to the U.S. from China last year, up from 300,000 in 2017. That’s an increase of more than 2,000 percent in five years.

These products are often produced without any oversight or government standards; in many cases, they are smuggled into the country illegally, and they end up on store shelves or sold on street corners.

It’s bad enough that our kids figured out how to get their hands on adult products, but the danger of these products can’t be overstated. They can be made with poisonous chemicals and substandard manufacturing processes with materials that can make our children sick, or worse.

Recent news reporting throughout the country has shown that some teenagers have overdosed in school on vapes laced with fentanyl.

Our lawmakers and government must do more to help law enforcement in our efforts to keep dangerous illegal products out of our country. The FDA knows that disposable vapes are the face of the new teen vaping epidemic, but it hasn’t done enough to get them off our shelves.

Some lawmakers have started to take action.

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin recently wrote to the attorney general and the FDA expressing his concern that the Biden administration has not acted swiftly enough to stop this scourge.

In February, Florida U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick announced she is introducing new legislation to prompt urgent FDA action.

Ohio U.S. Rep. Shontel Brown has also called to close the enforcement loophole. I hope that our elected leaders raise their voices too.

We need to take more aggressive action to take kid-friendly, disposable vapor products off our shelves and keep dangerous products out of our community so that the next generation can grow up happy and healthy.

Anthony Carothers is a retired police commander who served 28 years with the Chicago Police Department and four years with the Cook County sheriff’s office.

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