Which Is Better in Smoking Using Vape o
Which Is Better in Smoking Using Vape o
Which Is Better in Smoking Using Vape o
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Introduction
Smoking among teens has been a huge concern over many years. According to
federal statistics, approximately 90% of smokers try their first cigarette by 18. During the
past few years, vaping among teens has also surfaced as a major concern.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) every year, vaping is becoming
quickly popular among high school students, which definitely is a bad news. So, what’s
the good news? We’ll talk about it shortly, but first lets’ take a quick look at some stats
Teenagers vaping electronic cigarette the survey from 2014 shows that 15% male
and 11.9% female students reported having used an electronic cigarette in the preceding
30 days of the date the survey was conducted. In 2015, the ratio went up to 19% and
12.8% for boys and girls respectively. If we go back into 2013, only 1.1% of students
(1.4% males and 0.9% females) had tried an electronic cigarette, and it was the least
used method but within just one year its popularity went through the roof and 11.9%
students reported to have used it in 2014 and it became the most used method.
Several doctors think that these trends can have drastic impacts on the youth. The
CDC Director Thomas Frieden termed these trends as “alarming” and shocking”.
According to the same survey, while the overall tobacco use among adults hasn’t
changed much over the years, there has been a historic drop in the percentage of high
school student smokers. In 2013, 12.7% high schoolers reported to have smoked a
tobacco cigarette within the past 30 days of the survey date but in 2014 we saw an all-
time low ratio of 9.2%. However, the survey doesn’t show any significant change in 2015
This is because of two reasons: either the kids who were previously smoking
switched to vaping for harm-reduction or new smokers are preferring vaping over
potential of e-cigarettes and a study sponsored by the UK Government has shown that
e-cigarettes are exponentially safer than tobacco cigarettes. So, the claim that e-
cigarettes can prove to be a “gateway” for teenagers into the obnoxious world of tobacco
Unlike tobacco cigarettes, e-cigs or vaporizers don’t have the loathsome smell, the
ash or the butts. What’s more, the vapor evaporates in the air more quickly than smoke.
To make the matters worse, e-cigarettes come in all shapes and sizes, which can be
concealable or hard to distinguish from a normal pen, a USB memory stick or any other
handheld gadget. So, in case your child is vaping secretly, it can be extremely hard to
catch them. This really is a predicament for parents, however, with some inside info and
a little effort you can find out whether or not your kid is flirting with vaping, and can also
solid state to a vapor. In cigarettes, this releases nicotine which is absorbed into your
bloodstream through the lungs, causing increased heart rate, constricted blood vessels,
a release of dopamine in the brain, and feelings of alertness. But because nicotine is a
stimulant, once it’s no longer present, you crash and crave more, which ultimately leads
Tetrahydrocannabinol (aka THC) is aerosolized and follows the same pathway into your
Smoking only takes six seconds for the active compounds to reach your nervous
system. This smoke consist of partially burned particles, which creates tar in your body,
has cancer causing effects, blackens teeth and destroys taste buds. This is where vaping
comes in. If you can heat the active components enough to become aerosolized without
starting a combustion reaction with the other compounds, then you theoretically get fast
Vaping typically involves a glass or metal chamber which has an electrical current
passing through it. This way, it can be heated to a controlled temperature, creating a
vapor with minimal combustion, meaning you inhale much less smoke. For marijuana
users, vaporizers have become popular as the plant material can be heated to a specific
temperature — usually between 185 and 210 degrees Celsius — allowing just the THC
containing vapor to be extracted. For e-cigarettes, using a liquid solution instead of dried
tobacco, has become popular; this e-liquid contains water, nicotine, a base and
occasionally flavourings, and vaporizes at a much lower temperature. But this is where
This study is aimed to find out which is better in Smoking vaping or usual a
The study deals with the difference between vaping and smoking among
Related Literature
According to a recent report from Public Health England, e-cigarettes are thought
to be around 95% less harmful than smoking combusted tobacco (PHE, 2015b Public
As well as being less harmful, there is also evidence that e-cigarettes are playing
an important role in helping smokers’ to quit (Bullen et al., 2013 Bullen, C., Howe, C.,
Laugesen, M., McRobbie, H., Parag, V., Williman, J., Walker, N. (2013). Electronic
cigarettes for smoking cessation: A randomized controlled trial. Lancet, 382, 1629–1163.
Researchers working on the UK based “Smoking Toolkit” study have reported that
individuals trying to quit smoking using e-cigarettes are more likely to remain abstinent
than those seeking to quit using either “over the counter” nicotine replacement or a cold
turkey approach (Brown, Beard, Kotz, Michie, & West, 2014 Brown, J., Beard, E., Kotz,
D., Michie, S., & West, R. (2014). Real-world effectiveness of e-cigarettes when used to
109, 1531–1540.
In its recent report “Nicotine Without Smoke: Tobacco Harm Reduction” the Royal
College of Physicians has noted that “….e-cigarette use is likely to lead to quit attempts
that would not otherwise have happened, and in a proportion of these to successful
cessation (RCP, 2016 Royal College of Physicians (RCP). (2016). Nicotine without
smoke. Similarly, Public Health England has commented” there is also evidence that
(electronic cigarettes) can encourage quitting or cigarette consumption reduction even
amongst those not intending to quit or rejecting other support (Public Health England,
2015a: 10).
about some aspects of their use. Attention has been drawn to the lack of high-quality data
on the impact of e-cigarettes used over the long term (Callahan-Lyon, 2014 Callahan-
Lyon, P. (2014). Electronic cigarettes: Human health effects. To the possibility that e-
cigarettes might result in increased levels of nicotine dependence (Fillon, 2015 Fillon, M.
(2015). Electronic cigarettes may lead to nicotine addiction.To the fact that some smokers
are dual using both combustible and vapour based nicotine products thereby potentially
increasing their toxicant exposure (Adkison et al., 2013 Adkison, S., O’Connor, R.,
Bansal-Travers, M., Hyland, A., Borland, R., Yong, H., … Fong, G. (2013). Electronic
nicotine delivery systems: International tobacco control four country survey.To the
possibility that former smokers are being reintroduced to nicotine as a result of taking up
e-cigarette use having previously quit smoking (Durkin, Bayly, & Wakefield, 2016 Durkin,
S., Bayly, M., & Wakefield, M. (2016). Can E-cigarette ads undermine former smokers?
exploding (Yang, Rudy, Cheng, & Durmowicz, 2014 Yang, L., Rudy, S., Cheng, J., &
Durmowicz, E. (2014).
And to the accuracy of the labelling of some e-liquids particularly with regard to misleading
information on nicotine content (Goniewicz, Hajek, & McRobbie, 2013 Goniewicz, M.,
Hajek, P., & McRobbie, H. (2013). Nicotine content of electronic cigarettes: Its release in
vapour and its consistency across batches: Regulatory implications. Addiction, 109, 500–
The fear that e-cigarettes might act as a smoking gateway have been driven in part
by research in the U.S. which has shown that young people reporting past e-cigarette use
are more likely (on follow-up) to report having smoked combustible cigarettes. Wills and
colleagues, for example, have reported the results of their longitudinal survey of 2338
high school pupils in Hawaii, which found that the probability of pupils’ smoking was
significantly greater in the case of those pupils who had previously used an e-cigarette
than amongst those who had not previously used e-cigarettes (Wills et al., 2016 Wills, T.,
Knight, R., Sargent, J., Gibbons, F., Pagano, I., & Williams, R. (2016). Longitudinal study
of e-cigarette use and onset of cigarette smoking among high school students in Hawaii
However, as Bell and Keane have pointed out the very notion of a gateway effect
is highly complex constituting “a hybrid of popular, academic, and media accounts” rather
than a coherent theory (Bell & Keane, 2014 Bell, K., & Keane, H. (2014).
The claim that e-cigarettes might act as a gateway to smoking would require much
more than the finding that those young people using e-cigarettes are more likely to go on
to smoke than those that do not. For example an alternative explanation of that finding
may be that both vaping and smoking have similar antecedents such that it is not vaping
that is leading to smoking but another variable (for example, a willingness to experiment
with different forms of drug use, or an attitude of rebelliousness) that is driving both vaping
and smoking.
However, whilst it is certainly the case that early generations of e-cigarettes were
visually quite similar to combustible cigarettes, the subsequent and more recent
development of the technology has resulted in vaping becoming visually quite distinct to
smoking. Recent research has shown that those witnessing others’ e-cigarette use
experience no difficulty in distinguishing between vaping and smoking such that it is hard
to see why one activity (vaping) should result to another activity (smoking) becoming
renormalised (McKeganey, Barnard, & Russell, 2016 McKeganey, N., Barnard, M., &
smoking. International Archives of Addiction Research and Medicine. Indeed, in the study
undertaken by McKeganey and colleagues there was some evidence that amongst the
non-smokers interviewed, attitudes towards smoking had become even more negative as
a result of what was seen to be the availability now of a less harmful means of consuming
nicotine (McKeganey et al., 2016 McKeganey, N., Barnard, M., & Russell, C. (2016).
Although these various studies are undoubtedly important in assessing the public
health impact of e-cigarettes, there is also need for a more sociologically informed
research on e-cigarette users experience. In this paper we report the results of qualitative
research in which we have sought the views of e-cigarette users about how they came to
start vaping, what they like most and like least about vaping, their judgements about the
relative harm of smoking and vaping, their views as to how similar or dissimilar the
activities of vaping and smoking are, whether in their view their likelihood of smoking had
increased or decreased as a result of their vaping, and what they think about proposals
The key difference between traditional cigarettes and e-cigarettes and related
products is that the latter don’t contain tobacco. But, it isn’t just the tobacco in cigarettes
that causes cancer. Traditional cigarettes contain a laundry list of chemicals that are
Since 2009, FDA has pointed out that e-cigarettes contain “detectable levels of
known carcinogens and toxic chemicals to which users could be exposed.” For example,
found in antifreeze, tobacco-specific compounds that have been shown to cause cancer
these liquid cartridges and determined that they contained formaldehyde, a chemical
at levels much higher than the maximum EPA recommends for humans. In 2017, a study
published in the Public Library of Science Journal showed that significant levels of
benzene, a well-known carcinogen, were found in the vapor produced by several popular
brands of e-cigarettes.
The body’s reaction to many of the chemicals in traditional cigarette smoke causes
emphysema, and heart disease.[5] Since e-cigarettes also contain many of the same toxic
chemicals, there is no reason to believe that they will significantly reduce the risks for
these diseases.
In fact, a preliminary study presented at the 2018 annual meeting of the American
Chemical Society found that vaping could damage DNA [16]. The study examined the
saliva of 5 adults before and after a 15-minute vaping session. The saliva had an increase
been proven to be associated with DNA damage, for example, and DNA damage can
A study of mice funded by the National Institutes of Health found that e-cigarette
smoke could cause mutations in DNA that could increase the risk of cancer. These
specific mutations have been shown to potentially contribute to the development of lung
and bladder cancer in mice exposed to electronic cigarette smoke. The researchers claim
that these chemicals could also induce mutations leading to cancer in humans. Although
mice studies aren’t always relevant to human health, this study seems to confirm the
Because they are smokeless, many incorrectly assume that e-cigarettes are safer
for non-smokers and the environment than traditional cigarettes. However, a study
published in the International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health found that the
(VOCs) and airborne particles, both of which are potentially harmful when inhaled.[6]
Although e-cigarette vapor may not result in the obvious smell and visible smoke of
traditional cigarettes, it still has a negative impact on air quality, especially when vaping
indoors.
There are no long-term studies to back up claims that the vapor from e-cigarettes
is less harmful than conventional smoke. Cancer takes years to develop, and e-cigarettes
were only very recently introduced to the United States. It is almost impossible to
determine if a product increases a person’s risk of cancer or not until the product has
been around for at least 15-20 years. Despite positive reviews from e-cigarette users who
enjoy being able to smoke them where regular cigarettes are prohibited, very little is
Methodology
The purpose of the study is to determine if what is better vaping or usual smoking.
The objectives of this chapter is to (1) describe the research methodology of this study.
(2) describe the procedure used in designing the instrument and collecting data.
I. Research Design
A. Research Method
In order to gather the necessary data, the researchers used descriptive method. It
includes techniques that are used to summarize and describe numerical data for the
national High School. A survey is a descriptive research method collecting and analyzing
B. Research Instrument
and smoking practices of selected junior high school students. It is usually faster and
cheaper than interviews and direct observations. The researcher, provided a series of
vaping or usual smoking. These questions will then illustrate the attributes of vaping and
smoking to the students and point out the differences of using them.
Guide question:
2. What do you think is the advantage of using vape compare in usual cigarettes?
5. What do you think the reason why you are inclined to used vape or cigarettes?
begun climbing, one question looms large for public health officials: will the popularity of
e-cigarettes undo all the progress made in reducing teen smoking rates?
The answer isn’t very easy to pin down, but a recent study offers some evidence
to say such a fear is possible – while still falling well short of saying it’s actually happening.
Nearly a quarter of high school juniors and seniors had used an e-cigarette at least once,
and nearly one in five had smoked a traditional cigarette, according to the study published
in Pediatrics today. But two in every five teens currently using e-cigarettes had never
cigarettes, our data suggest that e-cigarettes may be recruiting new tobacco product
users who might not have used cigarettes,” said lead author Jessica Barrington-Trimis,
California. “California has historically had some of the lowest rates of adolescent smoking
in the country, so these results are particularly troubling and raise a lot of questions about
the potential consequences of high rates of e-cigarette use for the health of adolescents.”
The researchers surveyed more than 2,000 high school juniors and seniors in
Southern California in spring, 2014, on how often they had used e-cigarettes or smoked
traditional cigarettes in the past month. Students who had used a product one day within
the past 30 were considered “current users” in the study, and those who had ever used a
product, though not in the past month, were considered “past users.”
Overall, 9.6% were current users of e-cigarettes, and 5.7% were current
(traditional) cigarette smokers. The 24% who had ever tried e-cigarettes were also more
likely to one of the 18.7% who had smoked a traditional cigarette. Yet among those
considered current e-cigarette users, 40.5% had never smoked a traditional cigarette.
Conclusion
When comparing vaping and smoking, there are many different aspects to take into
consideration. In the bigger picture, the only thing throwing a little bit of shade on vaping
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