A 12-year-old girl who suffered a lung collapse and spent four days in an induced coma has told the BBC that children should never start vaping.

  • So seriously - who’s peddling this anti-vaping propaganda and what’s their goal?

    Vaping is easily the most effective way to stop smoking that’s ever existed. Certainly we don’t want kids to start doing it, and kids are the basis for much of the propaganda, but it’s never just restricted to trying to make it so kids don’t start. All of the propaganda efforts are directed toward stamping out vaping entirely, and that means that millions of people whose lives could literally be saved by switching from smoking to vaping will be denied that opportunity.

    Why? Whose interests are served by denying adult smokers access to the most effective smoking cessation product ever?

  •  NeuronautML   ( @NeuronautML@lemmy.ml ) 
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    1 year ago

    Media talking about vapes is like: “Olympic athlete who vapes died of a hole in the lung from which he bled out of, raising awareness to the practice of vaping in society.”

    Article: “The Olympic athlete was shot during a home robbery. It’s totally unrelated LOL.”

  • I vape, it’s how I quit smoking. I’d prefer to smoke, but it is the lesser of two evils, and I would encourage anyone who smokes cigarettes to switch. I recently went on holiday, smashed my vape and couldn’t find a replacement. I ended up buying the disposable kind from a supermarket for the first time and I was honestly shocked at how wasteful the are - so much unnecessary plastic that goes straight into the bin. But I was more shocked by how clearly geared towards children the disposable kind are - the bright colours, the flashy lights, the super sweet flavours, the high nicotine content. The one I bought was called YOLO ffs.

    • so much unnecessary plastic that goes straight into the bin.

      They are technically WEEE and should be recycled. Apparently the shops which sell them are supposed to take them back for recycling - I wonder if any do! Or maybe they resent anybody who brings them back for disposal.

      • I returned it to the supermarket and the checkout lady put it straight in the normal bin in front of me! I was referring to the packaging more though - a box, a leaflet, a sealed plastic bag thingy, plastic labels that have to be removed, a little plastic stopper for the mouth piece. You’re meant to get 600 puffs per vape but every one I tried died after 2 days. That’s a huge amount of waste compared to the one bottle of juice I recycle each month and the coil I throw out every two-three months.

  •  Echo Dot   ( @echodot@feddit.uk ) 
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    1 year ago

    The proposals include:

    • restricting the flavours and descriptions of vapes so they are no longer targeted at children
    • keeping vapes out of sight of children in shops
    • regulating vape packaging so they are not targeted at children
    • exploring whether increasing the price of vapes will reduce the number of young people using them
    • considering restricting the sale of disposable vapes, which ministers say are clearly linked to the rise in vaping in children and are incredibly harmful to the environment.

    So not really very much, it’s hardly worth storming the Bastille over.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A 12-year-old girl who suffered a lung collapse and spent four days in an induced coma has told the BBC that children should never start vaping.

    Sarah Griffin’s bedroom at her home in Belfast is like that of most 12-year-old girls - a dressing table littered with make-up, perfume bottles and hair straighteners, with some childhood cuddly toys on the bed.

    In early September she also developed a head cold, and when combined with her vaping, it all added up to what Sarah’s doctor describes as a “perfect storm”.

    “A lot of risk factors were going in the wrong direction,” says Dr Dara O’Donoghue, consultant respiratory paediatrician at the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children.

    “Disposable vapes at their current pocket money prices, with cartoons and bubble-gum flavour options, are far too attractive and easy for children to access,” she said.

    Professor Chris Whitty, England’s chief medical officer, said marketing vapes or e-cigarettes to children was “utterly unacceptable”.


    The original article contains 929 words, the summary contains 158 words. Saved 83%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!