Tag: juul users

  • Schools, Parents See Spike In Problematic Behavior Due To Vaping 

    Schools, Parents See Spike In Problematic Behavior Due To Vaping 

    Some schools have taken doors off bathrooms to limit the likelihood of students vaping in them. 

    As a high school freshman, Kristin Beauparlant began noticing changes in her son, Cade. During hockey games, he began to tire more easily, often having coughing fits. But Kristin says the onset of anxiety and mood swings was what really concerned her. 

    Over the next three years, the Washington Post reports, the Beauparlants eventually identified the problem: Cade had become reliant on nicotine via Juul, a type of e-cigarette resembling a USB drive. 

    According to the Post, the rise of e-cigarettes has sparked concern for young users, as pediatricians say they are seeing teens “who behave less like tobacco users and more like patients with [substance use] disorders.”

    Health Harms

    In addition to behavioral changes, nicotine use can lead to nicotine toxicity, as well as respiratory issues. In fact, Beauparlant was diagnosed with restrictive lung disease due to vaping. Beauparlant’s family is one of the few to try suing e-cigarette companies. Cade’s mother hopes it will lead Juul to fund treatment programs. 

    “We were thinking about vapes just like we thought about cigarettes,” Sharon Levy, director of the Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program at Boston Children’s Hospital, tells the Post. “Over time we realized no, no. This is something really different.”

    One potential reason for the teen behavior associated with e-cigarettes like Juul is their design which allows for greater intake of nicotine than normal cigarettes. 

    “With the Juuls, kids are able to get a much higher dose of nicotine—and dose matters,” Levy said. “These kids have behaviors that we often see in patients who have opioid or marijuana addiction, but we didn’t typically see with kids who developed addiction to traditional tobacco cigarettes.”

    In response, Juul has claimed their products are designed for adult use and claims that studies have shown nicotine from their devices to be absorbed more slowly than nicotine from cigarettes. 

    According to Jonathan Winickoff, pediatrician and researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital with a specialization in tobacco cessation, products proven to help adults quit tobacco may not have the same effect on teens. 

    “We have millions of kids now, millions of adolescents who are using mostly Juul—and in some cases other devices—who are unable to quit,” Winickoff tells the Post. “It’s something we don’t have the infrastructure to deal with.”

    Schools Take Action

    The use of e-cigarettes has become especially problematic in schools. Some schools have even turned to forbidding the use of USB drives since they look like Juuls. Others have taken doors off bathrooms to limit the likelihood of vaping in them. 

    Once Beauparlant’s son was caught vaping, the athlete was no longer allowed to play hockey. This took away any chance of playing in college as well. But after treatment from Winickoff, Kristin Beauparlant says she began to see her son return. 

    “We kind of lost four years of Cade to this addiction,” she told the Post. She adds that now that Cade isn’t vaping daily, “He just seems like a different kid. You can’t help but say there’s a correlation.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Man Sues Juul, Claims Vaping 2 Pods A Day Caused Massive Stroke

    Man Sues Juul, Claims Vaping 2 Pods A Day Caused Massive Stroke

    The suit also alleged that the man had become addicted in part due to Juul’s marketing strategy.

    The e-cigarette company Juul has been sued by a Connecticut man who claimed that his addiction to their products caused him to experience a debilitating stroke.

    Maxwell Berger, 22, said that he became addicted to Juul products while in high school, and within two years’ time, was using two cartridges a day.

    In 2017, Berger claimed that he had a massive stroke that left him with left side paralysis, speech impairment and a 50% loss of vision in both eyes.

    The suit also alleged that Berger had become addicted in part due to Juul’s marketing strategy, which targeted young people. In a statement to Forbes, a spokesperson for Juul said that the lawsuit was “without merit.”

    The suit was filed in San Franscisco County Superior Court by Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, a law firm that has been involved in numerous cases involving corporations and suits against tobacco companies.

    As Forbes noted, the suit alleged that Juul was responsible for fraudulent concealment and intentional misrepresentation of the products and their risks, as well as negligence in promoting and selling them to people under the age of 26.

    The Allegations

    In the suit, Berger claimed that he developed a dependency on Juul products in the summer of 2015 after his last year of high school. Within two years’ time, he was vaping every 10 minutes, interrupting family meals to use his device and ultimately consuming two cartridges, or pods, per day.

    Berger claimed that in July 2017, his Juul consumption caused him to have a massive hemorrhagic stroke that required three brain surgeries and more than 100 days in the hospital.

    As Forbes noted, the suit alleged that Berger was left with “catastrophic and permanent injuries,” including paralysis, impaired speech and loss of vision in both eyes.

    Juul spokesperson Ted Kwong told Forbes in a statement, “We do not want non-nicotine users, especially youth, to use our product. To this end, we have launched an aggressive action plan to combat underage use, as it is antithetical to our mission. To the extent these cases allege otherwise, they are without merit and we will defend our mission throughout this process.”

    To deter interest in their product by young people, Juul has shuttered its social media accounts in the United States and eliminated its fruit-flavored products while also supporting initiatives that would increase the minimum smoking age to 21.

    For critics, such efforts have come too late. They point to Juul’s early advertising campaign, which featured young models, bright colors and meme-like text—elements that could appeal to younger consumers.

    Juul co-founder Adam Bowen later said that these early ads were “inappropriate,” but also suggested that they had “no impact on sales.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Juul's Popularity On Instagram Explored In New Study

    Juul's Popularity On Instagram Explored In New Study

    Researchers uncovered nearly 15,000 Instagram posts related to Juul, all of which were posted over a three-month period in 2018.

    Thousands of posts about the e-cigarette brand Juul appeared on Instagram in just a three-month period in 2018, and more than half were focused on cultures or lifestyles related to young people.

    Those are among the findings in a new study in the online journal Tobacco Control, which, as UPI noted, also included posts comprised of content that promoted means of purchasing Juul-related products at a reduced cost.

    Spokesperson: Juul Is Cutting Back On Digital Marketing

    A spokesperson for Juul said that the company itself only issued eight posts on Instagram during that three-month period, and has actively sought to reduce digital marketing and social media listings, which medical specialists have claimed can contribute to the appeal of such products among young people.

    The study—conducted by researchers from the non-profit public health organization Truth Initiative, as well as New York University, the University of Chicago and Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health—looked at discussions of Juul and its products on social media by using hashtag-based keyword queries to collect posts about the e-cigarette brand.

    They uncovered nearly 15,000 Instagram posts related to Juul, all of which were posted between March and May of 2018. More than half of the posts (55%) contained what UPI described as “youth-related content”—memes, cartoon images and celebrity references, and using Juul products at home, school or other places that were likely to be frequented by teenagers.

    Another 57% of the posts also mentioned or specifically highlighted using Juul with family or friends during social activities, while approximately one in 10 also mentioned the addictive properties of nicotine, albeit in a “fun light,” as UPI said.

    Juul Deactivates Facebook, Instagram

    Lindsay Andrews, a spokesperson for Juul Labs, said that six of the company’s eight Instagram posts in the time period covered in the study were testimonials from former adult smokers.

    Andrews also said that in November 2018, the company deleted its Facebook and Instagram accounts, removed thousands of social media listings by third parties—including more than 25,000 individual Instagram posts—and limited its Twitter usage to non-promotional items like press releases. 

    But some health specialists remain skeptical of these efforts. Dr. Len Horovitz, a pulmonary specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City said, “Every young person has Instagram, and that’s how they share information. The actual industry doesn’t have to do anything but let the people using the device share their insights, and advice and encouragement.”

    Study senior researcher Elizabeth Hair, who is also the senior vice president of Truth Initiative’s Schroeder Institute, said that stricter regulation on social media could help to stem the tide of posts she and her co-authors uncovered.

    “If we can stop the promotional pieces of it, I think that will help stem a lot of it,” she said. “A lot of this content was from companies that were selling the product and had these promotional aspects to it.”

    View the original article at thefix.com