Vapouround magazine VM16 | Page 61

It’s a matter of causations vs correlation. The authors of these studies and countless others see similarities between two variables that lead them to conclude that young vapers will develop into smokers. Going by that logic, you could also say that playing with Lego or eating ice cream as a child will lead to a smoking habit later in life. But really the two are independent of each other. Surely, if vaping easily led to smoking, wouldn’t the number of vapers be going down and the number of smokers going up, or at least plateauing? Vapers would be slipping back into old habits all the time if vaping was a ‘gateway’. Smoking is a gateway to vaping, not visa versa. E-cigarette use among teenagers appears to be lower in the UK, but there’s still plenty of research into the issue on this side of the Atlantic. Last year was the first year that vaping was included in the study, which revealed that students were more likely to vape ‘just flavouring’ than nicotine-containing e-liquid. If nicotine is removed from the equation, so is one of the key properties that makes cigarettes so appealing. Teenagers should not be vaping. Full stop. But rather than ignoring the fact that some do or stoking unfounded fears about a reversal of decades of smoking decline, we should see it for what it is: experimentation. Few, if any, of those non-smokers who pick up an e-cigarette will develop a habit and fewer still will walk through the mythical gateway and become smokers. In ‘Young People’s Use of E-Cigarettes across the United Kingdom: Findings from Five Surveys 2015–2017’, Lead author Linda Bauld, professor of health policy at the University of Stirling, said, “Recent studies have generated alarming headlines that e-cigarettes are leading to smoking. Our analysis of the latest surveys from all parts of the United Kingdom, involving thousands of teenagers, shows clearly that for those teens who don’t smoke, e-cig experimentation is simply not translating into regular use.” In Monitoring the Future Survey: High School and Youth Trends, the National Institute on Drug Abuse in the US reported that student use of illicit drugs other than marijuana remained at its lowest level in the past 20 years. VM16 | 61