RT @ChaunceyGardner: #FactCheck: Your graph shows that total teen nicotine use was 55% higher in 2000 than in 2020. I don't recall the "t…
RT @ChaunceyGardner: #FactCheck: Your graph shows that total teen nicotine use was 55% higher in 2000 than in 2020. I don't recall the "t…
RT @ChaunceyGardner: #FactCheck: Your graph shows that total teen nicotine use was 55% higher in 2000 than in 2020. I don't recall the "t…
RT @JonathanFoulds: "Whether the health risks associated with nicotine product use among US adolescents have increased owing to the popular…
RT @ChaunceyGardner: #FactCheck: Your graph shows that total teen nicotine use was 55% higher in 2000 than in 2020. I don't recall the "t…
#FactCheck: Your graph shows that total teen nicotine use was 55% higher in 2000 than in 2020. I don't recall the "teen nicotine crisis of 2000." Do you? And, while teens should not vape, there is no question: Teen SMOKING has dropped FAR faster over
RT @JonathanFoulds: "Whether the health risks associated with nicotine product use among US adolescents have increased owing to the popular…
RT @JonathanFoulds: "Whether the health risks associated with nicotine product use among US adolescents have increased owing to the popular…
RT @jkelovuori: "Health risks of adolescent nicotine product use could have decreased during vaping’s popularity if assessment of the long-…
"Whether the health risks associated with nicotine product use among US adolescents have increased owing to the popularity of e-cigarettes depends on one’s assessment of the risks associated with vaping." https://t.co/Fxc4kuSGgQ
There's a lot in this paper.... And it makes for a decent complement to some recent (few months ago, I think) work on youth nicotine use from @DrSarahEJackson and colleagues. #StayCurious
@ParentsvsVape @FDATobacco Why is there a decrease? https://t.co/w9xK0jaXmh
RT @JAMANetworkOpen: This cross-sectional study found that exposure to nicotine products, as assessed by nicotine product days, decreased p…
This cross-sectional study found that exposure to nicotine products, as assessed by nicotine product days, decreased prior to the popularity of e-cigarettes among adolescents. This decrease slowed and then reversed owing to the upsurge of vaping. https://t
So if vaping is safer than smoking (it clearly is) that would mean health risks of youth nicotine product use could have decreased in recent years because of vaping. Who knew?
Well, kids sure don't smoke like they used to. That'll revert soon enough despite the requirements. https://t.co/8jGdJYT5Vd
"Health risks of adolescent nicotine product use could have decreased during vaping’s popularity if assessment of the long-term risks associated with vaping compared with those of smoking is low." https://t.co/GJfoO7OkSs