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  2. Protecting Youth From the Harms of Vaping | Smoking and Tobacco...

    www.cdc.gov/tobacco/e-cigarettes/protecting-youth.html

    Read E-Cigarettes and Youth: What Health Care Providers Need to Know fact sheet to learn about vapes and the risks to youth. Use the Health Care Provider Conversation Card to educate patients about the risks of e-cigarettes.

  3. Is vaping safe for teens? - Mayo Clinic Press

    mcpress.mayoclinic.org/parenting/is-vaping-safe-for-teens

    What are the known risks of vaping? Up to 2020, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recorded 2,807 Americans being hospitalized with e-cigarette or vaping use associated with lung injury (EVALI), of whom 68 died (aged between 15 and 75).

  4. E-Cigarette Use Among Youth | Smoking and Tobacco Use | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/tobacco/e-cigarettes/youth.html

    Many people have an important role in protecting youth from vaping including parents and caregivers, educators and school administrators, health care providers, and community partners. States and local communities can implement evidence-based policies, programs, and services to reduce youth vaping.

  5. Vaping: What You Need to Know (for Teens) - KidsHealth

    kidshealth.org/en/teens/e-cigarettes.html

    What Are the Health Effects of Vaping? The health risks of vaping include: addiction: E-cigarettes contain nicotine, a drug that’s highly addictive. You don’t have to vape every day to get addicted. anxiety and depression: Nicotine makes anxiety and depression worse. It also affects memory, concentration, self-control, and attention ...

  6. Teen Vaping Is a Public Health Crisis: What You Need to Know

    www.chop.edu/news/health-tip/teen-vaping-public-health-crisis-what-you-need-know

    Vaping increases the risk of teens developing an addiction to nicotine. Vaping exposes children and teens to harmful metals and toxic chemicals found in e-cigarettes. A mysterious, vaping-related illness is on the rise: e-cigarette or vaping product use-associated lung injury (EVALI).

  7. Health Effects of Vaping | Smoking and Tobacco Use | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/tobacco/e-cigarettes/health-effects.html

    Overview. No tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, are safe. Most e-cigarettes contain nicotine, which is highly addictive and is a health danger for pregnant people, developing fetuses, and youth. 1. Aerosol from e-cigarettes can also contain harmful and potentially harmful substances.

  8. Mayo Clinic Q and A: Vaping health risks for teens

    newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/.../mayo-clinic-q-and-a-vaping-health-risks-for-teens

    The bottom line is that vaping poses health risks to teens. Exposing the developing brain to high levels of an addictive substance could be associated with long-term unintended consequences. Talk with your children about the risks, and encourage them to avoid e-cigarettes and all other products containing tobacco and nicotine.

  9. E-Cigarettes & Vaping: What Teens Should Know - American Lung...

    www.lung.org/getmedia/5eccc29b-b181-48b3-97eb-ad402a7957d6/e-cigarettes-teens...

    What are the health risks of vaping? • Nicotine is highly addictive and exposure during adolescence can harm your developing brain and afect memory, concentration, learning, self-control, atention and mood. • Youth who vape are more likely to go on to use traditional cigaretes.

  10. Vaping and Teens: A Guide to the Dangers and How to Quit

    www.franciscanhealth.org/community/blog/why-vaping-is-dangerous-for-teens

    The Health Risks Of Teen Vaping. Originally, e-cigarettes were marketed as tools to help people break their tobacco habit. However, there’s little scientific research to back up that claim. But we do know nicotine addiction is hazardous for the developing adolescent and teen brain.

  11. Doctor's warning about vaping dangers - Mayo Clinic Health System

    www.mayoclinichealthsystem.org/.../a-doctors-warning-about-the-dangers-of-vaping

    Here are the dangers associated with vaping: No matter the delivery method, nicotine is addictive. Studies have shown that it may be harder to quit a nicotine addiction than a heroin addiction. Most discussions about helping teens stop vaping fail to address that they already may be addicted.