And stop panicking already! Seriously, this moral panic is the best free advertising that JUUL and other vape companies could ever possibly dream of.
Showing posts with label israel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label israel. Show all posts
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Israel's (and Europe's) Non-Ageist, Cool-Headed Response to Vaping
Unlike in the USA, it seems like cooler heads are prevailing in Israel and in the EU when it comes to vaping. Rather than respond from a position of moral panic over teen use, which only fuels the deviancy amplification spiral, they instead took a much more measured public health response. Israel recently banned JUUL due to its unusually high nicotine content, and almost immediately afterwards, JUUL began selling the same reduced-nicotine version there that they have already been selling in the UK and Europe to comply with EU regulations. And interestingly, Israel doesn't even have an age limit for vaping. (It varies in Europe, and is 18 in the UK.)
The kernel of truth to the concern about youth vaping in the USA has to do with the nicotine, which is hardly a benign substance. It is a highly addictive drug as well as a known neurotoxin, especially for the early adolescent brain, and yet some teens apparently don't realize that vape juices and pods even contain nicotine at all. And with JUUL's high nicotine content, by the time some young experimenters realize that it has nicotine, they may already be hooked. That said, vaping is still safer than smoking, and it seems to be making a dent in reducing youth and adult smoking rates, which are currently at a record low, as well as increasing successful quit rates among adults. That means that vaping is literally saving people's lives.
The best balancing act would probably be to stop panicking and to cap and reduce the maximum allowable nicotine levels for vape juices/pods to European and Israeli levels. The FDA already has the authority to do this. Alternatively, or in in addition, taxing vape juices/pods based on nicotine content would also be a good idea as well.
And stop panicking already! Seriously, this moral panic is the best free advertising that JUUL and other vape companies could ever possibly dream of.
And stop panicking already! Seriously, this moral panic is the best free advertising that JUUL and other vape companies could ever possibly dream of.
Oh, and by the way, there is zero evidence that raising the age limit to 21, as was done in several states and localities recently, has had any measurable impact on teen vaping OR smoking rates compared to states and localities that kept it at 18. And since the apparent success of Needham, MA still has yet to be replicated anywhere, it would be most parsimonious to consider them an outlier, with factors other than raising the age limit being the real underlying causes of success.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Will Israel Emulate the American Failure?
Perhaps. A recent government proposal in Israel, if passed, would restrict alcohol to a greater extent than it is now. The bill would ban off-premise alcohol sales after 11 pm, furnishing alcohol to minors, and most notably would (possibly) raise the drinking age from 18 to 21. Other restrictions may include raising the prices for spirits, banning alcohol advertising, and requiring special licenses to sell alcohol.
Allegedly, there has been an "epidemic" of teen drinking and drunkenness in just the past few years over there. But it is unlikely that raising the drinking age to 21 would help. Hell, they don't even enforce the current drinking age of 18! Perhaps if they did so, along with several of the other reforms that have been proposed, the "epidemic" drinking could be reduced, or at least contained. Attempting to emulate America's greatest alcohol policy failure since Prohibition would likely just throw gasoline on the fire.
Allegedly, there has been an "epidemic" of teen drinking and drunkenness in just the past few years over there. But it is unlikely that raising the drinking age to 21 would help. Hell, they don't even enforce the current drinking age of 18! Perhaps if they did so, along with several of the other reforms that have been proposed, the "epidemic" drinking could be reduced, or at least contained. Attempting to emulate America's greatest alcohol policy failure since Prohibition would likely just throw gasoline on the fire.
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