The data seems to show more high school students vaping,
with 14% saying they had done so recently, according to survey results released
Thursday. In last year’s survey, about 11% said they had vaped recently.
But experts cautioned that a change in the survey makes it
difficult to compare the two: This year, a much higher percentage of
participants took the survey in schools, and vaping tends to be reported more
in schools than in homes.
“It continues to be difficult to assess (vaping) trends
since the pandemic,” said Alyssa Harlow, a University of Southern California
researcher who studies youth e-cigarette use.
Educators say vaping is still a big problem.
Anecdotally, the 2021-2022 school year was worse than it was
before the pandemic, said Mike Rinaldi, principal of Westhill High School in
Stamford, Connecticut. That school year was the first when most kids returned
from remote learning following COVID-19 lockdowns, noted Rinaldi, who
speculated that many kids may have taken up vaping as they dealt with mental
health issues or stress related to the pandemic.
Kids vaping in school bathrooms and stairwells remains “a
constant battle,” said Matt Forker, principal of the nearby Stamford High
School.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researchers authored
the new study, which is based on a Jan. 18 to May 31 online survey of about
28,000 U.S. middle and high school students.
The study asked about use of e-cigarettes and other vaping
devices in the previous 30 days. In addition to the 14% of high school students
who said they vaped recently, about 3% of middle schoolers said they had done
so.
Of those who vaped, about 28% said they did it every day.
Nearly 85% of the youth who vaped used flavored products.
Favored brands included Puff Bar and Vuse, followed by Hyde and Smok.
Despite its persistence, vaping appears to be less popular
than it was: In 2019, 28% of high schoolers said they had recently vaped.
In the last three years, federal and state laws and
regulations have raised the purchase age for tobacco and vaping products, and
banned nearly all teen-preferred flavors from small, cartridge-based
e-cigarettes.
Some kids also may have been scared away by a 2019 outbreak
of vaping-related illnesses and deaths — most of them tied to a filler in black
market vaping liquids that contained THC, the chemical that makes marijuana
users feel high.
Leaders of one advocacy group said they worry the battle to
diminish youth vaping is not going well.
The numbers “may not reflect the much larger reality of youth
e-cigarette use that we hear about on a daily basis from parents, teachers,
pediatricians, and prevention specialists who are experiencing this urgent and
ongoing adolescent public-health crisis,” the group, Parents Against Vaping
E-Cigarettes, said in a statement.
The FDA has struggled to regulate the sprawling vaping
landscape, which includes both established companies and smaller startups. The
agency has been pilloried by Congress and health advocates for missing multiple
deadlines to issue decisions on millions of vaping products submitted by
companies hoping to stay on the market for adults.
The FDA tried to ban the leading e-cigarette maker Juul’s
products earlier this summer, citing questions about its potential health
risks. But it’s been forced to put that effort on hold following a court
challenge.
In this year’s survey, about one-fifth of teens who vape
reported recently using Juul, though it was no longer a favorite brand. That’s
a big shift from 2019, when more than half of teens reported Juul as their
usual brand.
Instead, many young people have migrated to e-cigarettes
delivering laboratory-made nicotine, a loophole in FDA’s oversight that
Congress closed this year. Despite gaining new authority over those products,
the FDA missed a mid-July deadline to issue decisions on millions of products,
including disposable Puff Bar e-cigarettes.
Like some other companies, Puff Bar reformulated its fruit
and candy-flavored vapes last year to use laboratory-made nicotine in a bid to
skirt FDA oversight. -AP
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