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It found the decline among vaping was driven largely by high schoolers. According to the survey, about 1.21 million high school students this year said they had used an e-cigarette in the past 30 ...
As of 2014 neither the long-term [13] nor short-term [132] [133] health effects from second-hand vapor were known. Limited information of the effects of second-hand vapor on children was available. [134] Second-hand vapor varies depending on the e-liquid, the device, and how it is used.
Youth vaping levels fell to the lowest in a decade this year, according to a new CDC and FDA report. Rates are one-third of the 2019 peak.
Vaping has slightly declined among teens. The use of e-cigarettes among high schoolers decreased from 14.1% to 10% from 2022 to 2023, the 2023 National Youth Tobacco Survey found.
The health effects of long-term nicotine use is unknown. [18] It may be decades before the long-term health effects of nicotine e-cigarette aerosol inhalation is known. [19] Short-term nicotine use excites the autonomic ganglia nerves and autonomic nerves, but chronic use seems to induce negative effects on endothelial cells. [20]
Although there is some evidence that e-cigarettes can be less addictive than smoking, with slower nicotine absorption rates, [13] [14] scientists do not know how harmful e-cigarettes are over the long-term [15] [16] because it is hard to separate the effects of vaping from the effects of smoking when so many people both vape and smoke.
A half million fewer school-age kids vaped this year than last – a win for public health officials who have warned for years of the health risks posed by these nicotine-delivering devices.
This phenomenon is also known as vaping but has many other names as well. [40] In 2020, it was estimated that approximately 1.3 million children in the United States smoke. [41] For the first time in 2014, e-cigarette use was higher among adolescents than smoking traditional cigarettes.