UK students say they're becoming addicted to Juul electronic cigarettes; expert says company has perfected nicotine delivery
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Liz Donohoe puffs from a Juul while posing at UK's School of Art & Visual Studies. (Photo by Quinn Foster) |
The nation's most popular brand of electronic cigarettes is creating addiction on the University of Kentucky campus, Jacob Eads reports for the Kentucky Kernel, the campus newspaper:
E-cigs "are marketed as a nicotine alternative for adults who are trying to quit smoking, but some public health professionals are waging a war" against them, "in an attempt to study potentially adverse health effects they might have," Eads reports. "Some say it�s becoming increasingly impossible to cut ties with their nagging Juuls."
�I think it was kind of a fad to start out. Everyone got one, and now everyone is just super addicted,� junior marketing major Evan Dilbeck told Eads. �I�ve tried to quit several times because it�s $16 for a pack of pods, but it�s impossible when everyone around you has one.�
The company says one disposable Juul pod, has about the same amount of nicotine as an entire pack of cigarettes, Eads reports: "Unlike other e-cigarettes, Juuls pack a punch comparable to traditional cigarettes. A hit from a Juul gives the body a jolt of nicotine at similar speeds to that of a cigarette, according to Darville. She said this almost-instantaneous rush is what makes the Juul so appealing."
Eads notes that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently mounted an assault on e-cigarettes because of the �epidemic proportion� of minors who are becoming addicted. "This came after FDA compliance checks uncovered 40 violations for illegal sales of Juul products to youth, one of which came from a local Lexington gas station."
Juul Labs CEO Kevin Burns said in a press release, �We are committed to preventing underage use.� The company "has also pledged to establish its own youth prevention campaign with the help of a $30 million investment intended fund youth education and independent research," Eads reports. "But while the gesture of a $30 million investment sounds promising, some public health officials say they�re still not buying it."
�That�s pocket change to them,� Darville said, �but they make it sound so wonderful.�
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