TAMPA - Touted as a safer alternative to traditional smoking, electronic
cigarettes are supposed to give smokers their nicotine fix without the
cancer-causing side effects of tobacco. But some have serious concerns
that the battery-operated vaping devices may actually pose more dangers
to users.
Florida banned smoking in most public places more
than eight years ago, but some 40 years after Gwynne Chesher started
lighting up. “In 1965, everybody smoked, it was an acceptable thing to
do back then."
At her worst, Chesher was puffing a pack a day and eventually, she tried
to stop. "I tried the gum; It gave me a stomach. Tried the patch;
it made my heart beat fast and scared me."
So when her son, recently suggested yet something else, Gwynne signed up.
"You just inhale like a cigarette," and began what some call 'vaping.' “It looks like smoke, but its water vapor."
E-cigarettes
are battery operated. They have the look and feel of a traditional
cigarette, without the smell, the smoke and the harmful side effects,
say its supporters. Chesher said, “I was really impressed.”
Then her doctor weighed in. “He was like 'No way! You can't use those!'”
Dr.
Mike Feinstein, a spokesman for the American Lung Association said,
“People are inhaling some type of chemical vaporized compound into their
lungs without really knowing what's in it."
Last year, The
American Lung Association issued its own warning about e-cigarettes.
“This is a buyer stay away, a buyer health hazard, potentially."
Doctor Robert Greene treats lung cancer patients at the Palm Beach
Cancer Institute and said the product is potentially a health hazard.
“There really is no information about whether they're safe or not, and
that's part of the problem."
He says with no real data on
e-cigarettes, the three-year-old tobacco alternative may actually be
more harmful that traditional cigarettes. "The doses of nicotine that
you get could conceivably be higher than what you would get in a typical
cigarette."
Ray Story said "To make that claim is obviously
ludicrous." Story is an e-cigarette distributor and CEO of the Tobacco
Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association. “At the end of the day when you
look at an e-cigarette, is it addictive? Nicotine is addictive."
Authorities
don't necessarily know what's inside of e-cigarettes, but the FDA
tested a small sample just a few years ago and found a number of toxic
chemicals including diethylene glycol - the same ingredient used in
antifreeze.
Story says, “I understand they found all kinds of
stuff. At one point in time you may have found whatever you want to
find. If it cannot be substantiated by the other side, you have to
question their motive."
The findings forced The Food and Drug Administration to issue a nationwide health warning.
Gwynne Chesher says she's decided to wash her hands of anything to do
with electronic cigarettes. “I have no problem throwing them in the
trash."
According to The Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette
Association, e-cigarettes contain just five ingredients, all approved by
the FDA. Recently, the FDA announced it will begin to regulate
e-cigarettes as a tobacco product.
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