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Are E-cigarettes safe? Details are hazy.

E-cigarette refill cartridges sold by E-Cigarettes National.

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TEXT OF STORY

Tess Vigeland: If you're craving the taste of watermelon, peppermint or maybe clove with your smokes, as of today you're out of luck. The Food and Drug Administration's ban on candy and fruit-flavored cigarettes is now in effect. It's the result of the tobacco legislation signed earlier this year by President Barack Obama.

But there's a new product that none of the new regulations will apply to. It's called an e-cigarette or electronic cigarette. It's basically a water vaporizer that delivers a dose of nicotine without emitting any smoke. Marketplace's Jeremy Hobson reports.


JEREMY HOBSON: E-Cigarettes have been around for a few years, mostly in Asia. Now they're being shipped over here in increasing numbers to satisfy a growing American appetite for them.

MATT SALMON: There's probably in this country this year over a $100 million in revenues that will be generated due to this industry.

That's Matt Salmon, a former Congressmen, turned president of the E-Cigarette Association. He and others in the industry say the product is not meant to help people quit smoking. It's an alternative to cigarettes that doesn't produce second-hand smoke. And doesn't contain as many harmful chemicals as ordinary cigarettes.

SALMON: What we do know is that tobacco smoke or cigarette smoking kills over 400,000 people a year in this country alone. We ought to be looking at more alternatives to tobacco smoke for people and not less, because right now what we're doing isn't working very well.

A typical e-cigarette costs about a $100. But the cartridges are about one-fifth the price of an ordinary pack of cigarettes with the same amount of nicotine.

Cory Canaro tried e-cigarettes briefly.

CORY CANARO: I was looking for something that -- where I'm not smoking all the time. You know, like an alternative. Because I've tried the gum, and I've tried going cold turkey, and my wife can attest that that's not good for my personality.

But a report on the news about potential safety hazards caused him to go back to regular cigarettes after just a week. Khalid Nayar tried smoking e-cigarettes in his Manhattan office.

KHALID NAYAR: They eased the craving, I was able to smoke indoors, which was good.

But after doing some research, Nayar found the product hadn't been approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

NAYAR: If we can determine what you know actually that vapor contains, and if it's not harmful for you, then I would go back to it.

And that's the thing. There's no hard evidence either way about the safety of e-cigarettes. And until there is, the American Lung Association wants the products banned. Here's the association's vice president of national policy and advocacy, Paul Billings.

PAUL Billings: If they are to be on the market, they need to be demonstrated to meet the standards for a drug delivery device in this country, which is to be demonstrated to the FDA's satisfaction that they are safe and effective.

Hobson: Are they safer than ordinary cigarettes?

Billings: Who knows? These are drug delivery devices. Nicotine is an addictive drug. FDA has found ingredients that we find in anti-freeze that are toxic to humans as well as carcinogens in the products in very limited testing.

The FDA wouldn't comment on tape for this story. But the agency says it has the power to regulate e-cigarettes. It wants all sales and marketing stopped until companies have applied for FDA approval. But e-cigarette makers have taken the FDA to court. And until the case is settled, regulation is on hold.

Tiffany Ellis works for the company E-Cigarettes National. She says research from the UK and New Zealand proves the products are safe. And she says companies like hers are getting a bad rap.

TIFFANY ELLIS: A lot of people seem to think that -- that we're just in this to make money, and we're not. Making money is not as important as the ideology of what you're trying to support and that is freedom of choice.

She points to the example of her own grandfather. He smoked for 40 years, and has no interest in quitting. She says he just wants to smoke without harming the people around him. The issue of e-cigarettes in the United States is now in the hands of a federal judge. A ruling is expected soon.

In New York, I'm Jeremy Hobson for Marketplace.

About the author

Jeremy Hobson is host of Marketplace Morning Report, where he looks at business news from a global perspective to prepare listeners for the day ahead.

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Adam Tredwell's picture
Adam Tredwell - Sep 24, 2009

Actually, to correct a mistake in a previous comment, the "anti-freeze" chemical that the FDA was concerned about was not propylene glycol but diethylene glycol, and it is dangerous in significant concentrations. However, in the concentrations found, it was unlikely to pose any risk. Additionally, the liquid tested by the FDA was of Chinese origin. There are also two US manufacturers of e-Liquid. Given US regulations regarding the production and sale of glycerine and propylene glycol (the main ingredients used to produce the vapor), there is virtually no chance that this chemical could find its way into US produced e-liquid, and to the best of my knowledge, no tests have ever indicated its presence in US made e-Liquid.

*In the interest of full disclosure, I am the President of one of the two previously mentioned US e-Liquid manufacturers*

Charlie Pruyn's picture
Charlie Pruyn - Sep 24, 2009

I bought an e-cigarette for about $50. It is not a perfect replacement for cigarettes but I have gone from a pack a day to about a pack every two weeks. I understand that there should be testing of these products but they should be kept on the market while this is ongoing. I mean, they can't possibly be worse for my health than a pack of cigarettes every day, right? I can't believe nobody came out with these decades ago! Speaking for myself, it has been a blessing. I feel much healthier.

Patrick Mcirishenough's picture
Patrick Mcirish... - Sep 24, 2009

my personal feeling about the FDA trying to ban e-cigarettes is fueled by the kick the habit drugs and patches and pills that the FDA endorses. the anti-freeze ingredient mentioned in the note by the way is propylene glycol, a food additive the FDA determined to be safe for human consumption several years back. fiy, its used in most pharmaceuticals. Tiffany Ellis is right, its about fighting for freedom, fighting for a choice. There are much better things the government should be spending time on right now anyway, especially the FDA with the h1n1 vaccines coming out.H1N1 popped up a few months ago and they already have a vaccine?! it takes most medicine companies years to get things approved. but off topic, ugh . e-cigarettes are fine, and if you have any questions. LOOK it up for your self, instead of listening to someone else's remarks an claims.

Adam Wyrcimaga's picture
Adam Wyrcimaga - Sep 23, 2009

Who would have thought Las Vegas would save my life? I’m 32 years old and have been smoking 2 packs a day for 20 years. During a visit to Las Vegas, I picked up an E-Cigarette. Figured, what the hell $150.00! I spend that in a week on smokes. It’s been 1 week today without a smoke. I’ll never touch another cigarette again. The thought of them makes me ill! In just one week, I feel like a new person. I sleep better, eat better and am more alert during the day. Everything is BETTER! Spend the doe, kick the habit. I wasted 20 years of my life! No more!

Dan Kosko's picture
Dan Kosko - Sep 23, 2009

Myself and about 5 friends have switched to e-cigarettes over the past few months, and completely or nearly completely quit "analog" cigarettes. I recommend them to anyone who smokes, they can change your life for the better.

Really it is as simple as some of these other comments, you can quit tobacco cigarettes immediately and without withdraw.

derrick gilbert's picture
derrick gilbert - Sep 23, 2009

I have smoked for 25 years and I purchased an E-Cigarette about 3 weeks ago. Mostly due to the fact that I am a tech junkie and anything digitalized will see its way to my house and not as a way to quit. After 3 days of "vaping" I found that I didn't even enjoy the taste of traditional cigarettes anymore. I feel better, don't stink and my allergies are mostly gone. Now I will start reduce the amount of nicotine in the "carts" to zero and be done with the filthy habit for good.

nathan jarrett's picture
nathan jarrett - Sep 23, 2009

My friend actually used e-cigarretes to quit smoking with success, a few months now, and I know it isn't advertised as such but if it is found to be a safe or even less harmful then why not allow it? But hey I smoke hookah for my own enjoyment and relaxation so I prefer not to let others tell me what to do.

Leigh Cunningham's picture
Leigh Cunningham - Sep 23, 2009

Couple of corrections: A "typical e-cigarette" is nowhere near $100. Excellent quality kits can easily be found for about half that. It's also fiction that one cart = one pack of cigarettes... nowhere near it. But vaping is still much cheaper than using tobacco, on a number of levels.

And the American Lung Association should be looking into the facts itself, instead of regurgitating the spin that was put on the FDA testing; those test results were actually pretty clean. One out of 18 carts tested (from 2 mfrs) contained less than 1% diethylene glycol. Diethylene glycol is used in tobacco processing. A few tobacco-flavored carts contained tobacco-specific nitrosamines (carcinogens). You find far more TSNs in cigarettes; you also find them in FDA-approved nicotine replacement therapy products (some of which have FLAVORS, gasp!). But the ALA wants e-cigs banned? Do they prefer people using tobacco? Because that's what will happen.

I bought my first unit just to cut down on cigarettes because of price issues. I ended up quitting cigarettes in 3 days. That was 5 months ago. I still vape, but with low- and no-nicotine liquids. The ALA needs to tell me why my blood pressure's down, why I no longer have smoker's cough and a head full of mucus every morning, and why I don't get winded nearly as easily.

Katie Wilds's picture
Katie Wilds - Sep 22, 2009

I actually just purchased the E-Cig and I love it. I didnt want to smoke around my neice's and nephews becuase of the second hand, plus I didnt want to keep harming my body as bad as what I have been with regular cigs. I can now smoke in the house and not have to worry about harming my family and friends. Im not saying that I am not woried about what the vapor truely is, I am. But right now, theres no wrong answer becuase we dont know. I cant wait for the to be tested by the FDA to make sure that this isnt going to harm us more. But until then, I am going to keep using my E-Cig.

Eric Wolf's picture
Eric Wolf - Sep 22, 2009

I was pleased to hear your story today on the electronic cigarette. Too little media coverage even attempts to show both sides of this issue.

Over the past twenty years, I have tried virtually all smoking cessation methods to get away from a pack-a-day habit. Only the e-cigarette has taken away my urge to smoke a cigarette completely. The knee-jerk reaction to the technology by the anti-smoking establishment has frankly caught me by surprise. Numerous studies have shown these to be a much less harmful alternative to cigarettes and even the FDA could only find trace amounts of harmful chemicals in only a small percentage of samples. Less, in fact than those found in other approved smoking cessation products and far less than those found in conventional cigarettes.

The electronic cigarette technology should be embraced by the medical community, but there seems to be a reluctance to separating nicotine from the real killer, the burning cigarette.

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