The e-cigarette boom really started to take off this year, and therefore there is little to none evidence of the long-term health benefits. In an article by Wired on April 2, 2015, “The problem is, as in the early days of campaigns against cigarettes, there isn’t definitive evidence that e-cigarettes cause long-term harm—a point that pro-vapers will be quick to remind you of. But there also isn’t definitive evidence that they’re safe. And there are many good reasons to assume they’ll be found in time to increase cancer and heart and lung disease. ‘E-cig people would like you to believe that because the evidence that we have on them is limited, that we don’t know anything. And that’s just not true,’ says Stanton Glantz, director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California San Francisco. There’s a difference, he says, between not having evidence of an effect and having evidence of no effect.”  While evidence of the harmful or non harmful effects of e-cigs are yet to be determined, one thing is known. Smoking chemicals versus not smoking chemicals will have an effect on your health. To what effect? That’s yet to be determined.

 

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