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Electronic Cigarette News

The TV show The Doctors reviewed electronic cigarettes a few years ago and I think it’s worth viewing again.

Keep in mind this was aired long before the FDA had its negative remarks aired.  But, it’s still nice to see what doctors thought about the product after reviewing them the first time.

 

In Utah, the House has passed the bill, HB245, with a vote of 42-31 that will ban hookahs and electronic cigarettes in indoor public places on February 21, 2012.

Protesters outside of the Capitol were smoking hookahs in protest.  Some, however, say this may not have helped their case:

“They smoked outside today,” said Rep. Brad Last, R-Hurricane, sponsor of HB245. “They could have done it inside and there would be nothing we could say” under current law.*

The bill now moves to the Senate for the next stage In legislation.  But there is an amendment for current hookah bar and electronic cigarette shop owners:

The bill, however, exempts hookah bars and e-cigarette shops from the ban for five years, when the exemption will sunset, and the Legislature may revisit whether to extend it.*

*News from The Salt Lake Tribune

Upcoming Previews

 

Here is a sneak peek at the next starter kits up for preview:

South Beach Deluxe Starter Kit

I’ve read many reviews on this product.  I’ve been curious if the real product holds up to all the hype surrounding it.  Find out as soon!

EverSmoke Basic Starter Kit

What is EverSmoke and how will their electronic cigarettes hold up under review?  Once I get my hands on them, I’ll thoroughly test them and post the results so you can find out too.

More information about the exploding electronic cigarette has surfaced.

 

CR123A

CR123A

The exploding cigarette story that sent waves through the network has more information that have been publicized.  Monday evening, a man who switched to electronic cigarettes 2 years ago because of health issues on his lungs, suffered injuries when his modified electronic cigarette explode while he was using it.  The explosion removed his  front teeth, took some of the flesh from his tongue and left lacerations on his face.

Initially no news was released as to what brand or model he was using.  Fire fighters only said they found several rechargeable batteries, and charging dock and the remains of a “cigar sized” case from the exploding cigarette which they collected.

While the exact brand is unknown, several manufacturers have spoken out.

Thomas Kiklas, co-founder of the Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, said the industry knows of no problems with the cigarettes or batteries exploding.

Kiklas cited a federal report that found 2.5 million Americans used electronic cigarettes last year.

“There have been billions and billions of puffs on the cigarettes and we have not heard of this happening before,” he said.

And this account from the fire Chief Parker:

Chief Butch Parker of the North Bay Fire District responded to the call. “I have never heard of or seen anything like this before,” Parker told ABCNews.com. Although the battery was unrecognizable after the incident, Parker reported finding several 3.0 volt CR123A type batteries charging in the room along with a scorched battery case that appeared to be one for a cigar-sized device.

These rechargeable batteries are usually used in mod electronic cigarettes.  Mods are becoming more popular, but originally they were “Mods” created by users of electronic cigarettes.  Whether this was a home-made electronic cigarette or was purchased by a site that sells mods instead of regular, “Big company” electronic cigarettes remains to be seen.

Most mod electronic cigarettes are larger than typical electronic cigarettes and don’t use the CR123A batteries as shown above.  Those are not the batteries found, just a picture representing the general style of a CR123A.  Those mods are about the size of a small flash light and last usually for a day or so.  A typical electronic cigarette is just a little longer than a regular cigarette and last just a couple of hours.

I’ll post more information as it becomes available.

A man in the Florida panhandle was injured severely when his electronic cigarette exploded.  He lost teeth, part of his tongue and has cuts to his face when the battery for his electronic cigarette somehow ignited as reported by WEAR Channel-3.

Photographer, Vietnam veteran and father of three Tom Holloway was being treated at a burn center, the station reported.

Friends and neighbors reported that Mr. Holloway stopped smoking for 2 years with the help of electronic cigarettes due to health issues.

Fire officials theorize that the cigarette’s battery somehow ignited and it was essentially as if Holloway was “holding a bottle rocket in his mouth,” the station reported.

According to the firemen, due to the explosion it’s impossible to tell what brand electronic cigarette the battery was.

This report was found on www.orlandosentinel.com.

The weartv.com report is here:

http://www.weartv.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/wear_vid_20551.shtml

The electronic cigarette bill in Hawaii, SB2233, was amended by the Senate Ways and Means Committee to remove the 70% tax increase on the sale of electronic cigarettes and passed with only the ban of sales to minors part in tact.

Opponents of the taxing idea said the devices, which deliver vaporized nicotine to users, do not contain tobacco, do not emit hazardous or noxious smoke, and actually help customers break smoking habits.

This is an important moment for electronic cigarette companies and users.  If the proposed tax increase was passed, there was a good chance several other states would have proposed similar tax increases that would have had a negative impact on US-based electronic cigarette manufacturers and distributors, not to mention e-cig users.

This can definitely be seen as a positive step for the electronic cigarette community.

Read the article here at hawaiireporter.com.

HB245, the bill that would label Hookah and electronic cigarettes as smoking, was approved on Thursday, 2-9-2012 in Utah.  This bill bans Hookahs and electronic cigarettes in public places in Utah by labeling them as “smoking”

Hookah bars are allowed to use hookahs if they meet certain criteria; that they have to sell the contents of the hookah, everyone must be 21 or older to enter and at least 10% of its sales come from Hookahs.

Some e-cig users disagreed:

“I don’t want to bash anybody, but I keep hearing the reference to smoke. E-cigarettes are not smoke. It is water vapor,” said Angela Ross, who switched to e-cigarettes after 20 years of tobacco smoking.

But some legislatives state their reasons:

Teresa Garrett, of the Utah Department of Health, said regulations would clear up confusion about e-cigarettes.

“Businesses don’t know if they can exclude them or not,” she said. “This bill helps clarify that.”

Read the rest of the article here from desertnews.com.

The proposed bill to ban electronic cigarettes to minors and impose a 70% tax rate is under intense debate.  Here are a few excerpts:

State Health Department Director Loretta Fuddy told members of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, “There is very little known about the long term health effects of the use of e-cigarettes or the vapors given off. Recent studies have shown that within one liquid nicotine cartridge there is enough nicotine to cause serious illness or even death.”

And a very well proposed counter:

Cory Smith, president of local retailer Volcano Fine Electronic Cigarettes, said the product actually helps tobacco smokers quit their habits and produces none of the second-hand smoke issues associated with traditional tobacco cigarettes.

“The tohacco tax is aimed at  deterring tobacco use and  generating revenue to pay for health care costs associated with tobacco-related harms,” Smith said.

“Since the research thus far indicates that e-cigarettes show promise as a means to  deter tobacco use and thereby reduce the cost of  tobacco-related harms, it makes no sense to subject e-cigarettes to the tobacco tax,” Smith said.

Taxing e-cigarettes at the 70% tobacco rate would shut down his business and drive customers to the internet to obtain the devices from out-of-state sources, he said.

“The general cost of a fully-functioning electronic cigarette kit is upwards of  $70,” Smith testified. “Levying a 70’% tax on all of these items would virtually guarantee that purchasers will go out of state, or, worse yet, return to tobacco cigarettes.”

And,  the argument to that:

But Health Director Fuddy said more scientific study must be undertaken of e-cigarettes.

“We don’t feel that from a Department of Health perspective that the science is really in yet. This is a rather new product,” she said.

Also testifying in favor of the measure were the state Tax Department, Honolulu Police Department and various health organizations including the American Cancer Society and the Coalition for a Tobacco-Free Hawaii.

Coalition executive director Deborah Zsyman told the committee that some sales of e-cigarettes appear aimed at under-aged customers.

“Often the cartridges are candy flavored, making them enticing to youth.   Currently, they are readily available at mall kiosks and small shops throughout our state and are priced as low as $10 for the disposable varieties,” said Zsyman.

The coalition’s concerns about e-cigarettes center on sales to minors and on the lack of scientific evidence on the health effects of the devices.

“I think if we find there’s evidence that this is really a product that is safe and  does help people quit smoking, then, yes, we’d be supportive of it,” she said.

Both well voiced arguments.  But the analogy that they would rather the ship full of regular cigarette smokers is sinking and a possible life raft in the form of electronic cigarettes is now handy for those passengers, they’d rather let the passengers stay on the sinking ship than allow them to switch to the raft.

Banning the from minors is, of course, the right thing to do.  No one is arguing that.  But, if the tax goes into place, are they ok with people switching back to cigarettes?

Now, the flavors they argue that are targeted to kids, has anyone researched this?  Are these flavors that adult buyers have requested?  I know I, as an e-cig user prefer Coffee flavor over menthol, that I use to smoke for 19 years in regular cigarettes.  Arguably there may be a fey that are using unsavory methods and those people should be stopped.  No one should entice kids or non-smokers to these products.

But, if this bill passes, a USA based company will go under: wolcanocigs.com is based in Hawaii and will not be able to withstand the 70% tax law.  If this is imposed on more states, similar companies will go under, because we, as e-cig users, can simply by them from over-seas, mainly the UK.

Why don’t we get the studies in place.  Is second-hand vapor bad for people around them?  Just because we can’t smell it, doesn’t mean it isn’t harmful.  Can we answer real questions and not worry about how much money somebody is making?

In short, taxing electronic cigarettes before anyone can prove they are dangerous is as bad as allowing regular cigarettes, that kills smokers and non-smokers alike, to still sell in the billions that they do.

If electronic cigarettes prove dangerous, I will one of the first to ask for more aggressive actions to be taken.  Lets not destroy more american businesses before all the evidence is in.

Read the article here from HawaiiReporter.com.

The Smoke-No-Smoke German group opened its first all multi-flavored electronic cigarette shop in Britain, Rugby Warwickshire, called fag-free tobacconist (“fag” is the UK’s slang for cigarette, so no emails please).  They have 6 stories in Germany already and hope to spread the stores over England quickly.

They sell flavored disposable e-cigs with a “try before you buy”  policy.  They are focusing on current cigarette smokers.  They are attacking even the nobility:

“Her name was Lady Denbigh, she came in and has gone away to recommend it to her Lord husband,” said Jim Lacey, Managing Director of the company.

With smokers as their target audience Jim says they have about a 95% sales ratio with walk in customers.  The reasoning ranges from smokers looking for an alternative that doesn’t contain the almost 5000 carcinogens that regular cigarettes do.   Also they are cheaper:

“I think it’s a combination of a number of factors really. The cost is 80 per cent cheaper than cigarettes and the sensation is as real as it can be to smoking without actually smoking.” says Jim.

 

Read the article here at newstoday.co.uk.

Here’s a video on Electronic Cigarettes and one man’s problem with using them in an Olive Gardens in Greenville, NC.