Myth Busting: Difference between revisions

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===[https://twitter.com/jkelovuori/status/1349746509605195777 suggestions on twitter]===
===[https://twitter.com/jkelovuori/status/1349746509605195777 suggestions on twitter]===
===2015: <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 57, 33);" data-mce-style="background-color: #ff5733;">Truth</span> Blog: [https://www.clivebates.com/jama-paper-finds-some-adolescents-experiment-with-stuff-so-what/ JAMA paper finds some adolescents experiment with stuff – so what?]===


===2014: <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 57, 33);" data-mce-style="background-color: #ff5733;">Truth</span> Evaluation: [https://clivebates.com/documents/JAMAcomment.pdf Youth Experimentation With e-Cigarettes Another Interpretation of the Data]===
===2014: <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 57, 33);" data-mce-style="background-color: #ff5733;">Truth</span> Evaluation: [https://clivebates.com/documents/JAMAcomment.pdf Youth Experimentation With e-Cigarettes Another Interpretation of the Data]===

Revision as of 12:59, 26 July 2024

Mythbusters
Mythbusters

Here we take a look at busting myths and debunking junk science about nicotine or products containing nicotine.


  • ^ Link will take you to the page with information about nicotine and cancer concerns

Myth ENDS - COVID/EVALI/Respiratory Disease caused by vaping/nicotine

  • See Also:
ENDS - Popcorn Lung below
EVALI Page
COVID Page


2021: Truth Testimony in Netherlands pertaining to a potential flavour / flavor ban: Regulation of e-cigarette flavours – a response

Signed by 24 experts from around the world
Covers 12 key points


The link between ever, but not current, ecigarette use and COVID-19 suffers from biological implausibility.
A number of experts responded swiftly to the study's abnormal findings that lacked a credible causal theory.



  • There is no such thing as a 'wet lung.' This is neither a scientific term nor a medical condition. The case report that was accompanied by a press statement refers to hypersensitivity pneumonitis. This is a condition caused by a form of an allergic reaction that results in an inflammatory response.
  • Debunked article: Teen develops "wet lung" after vaping for 3 weeks


  • The rest of the story is that essentially what we have here is an example of scientific dishonesty and apparently intentional deception of the journal readers and the public. For a movement that has devoted so much attention to attacking the tobacco industry for its deception and scientific dishonesty, I believe that we need to adhere to the highest standards of honesty and transparency in our scientific reporting. This is not happening in our reporting of the health effects of vaping, and it is certainly not happening in this study and the dissemination of its results.
  • Debunked Abstract of: Electronic Cigarette Use and Respiratory Symptoms in Adolescents
  • Debunked Press Release: E-cigarette use linked to risk of respiratory symptoms among adolescents


2019: Research Notes Minnesota Smoke-Free Alliance THC Cutting Agents

  • Research on the products use to cut THC containing liquids that led to the outbreak of EVALI / VALI / THCVALI. This outbreak was falsely blamed on the nicotine vaping industry (ENDS).

Myth ENDS exhaled/inhaled vapor contains dangerous levels of toxic chemicals/VOCs

Our results were revealing in identifying a very small contribution of flavorings on aldehyde emissions. In fact, aldehyde levels were so low that consumption of 5 grams liquid per day would expose vapers to less formaldehyde and acetaldehyde than just staying at home and breathing air. For acrolein, exposure was orders of magnitude lower compared to NIOSH-defined recommended safety limits. To give you an idea of the differences in results, the authors of the original study found up to 7000 ug/g formaldehyde, while we found a maximum of 62 ug/g.
In conclusion, we confirmed that flavouring compounds can contribute to aldehyde emissions from ECs, but such contribution, detected in only 3 liquids and two flavours herein, was minimal.


  • The concentration increases of nicotine and formaldehyde were small when compared with those described in other studies of indoor atmospheres or health regulatory thresholds. No significant changes were observed when comparing the concentrations of exhaled breath in vaping and no vaping days. Even the exhaled breath nicotine concentrations in both conditions were similar. As expected, toluene, xylenes, benzene, ethylbenzene, and naphthalene did not show increases in the vaping days since combustion was not involved.


Obviously, smokers or vapers do not hold their breath for 20 seconds before exhaling the breath. Thus, the study probably overestimated the absorption rate of VOCs present in cigarette smoke or e-cigarette aerosol.
The results of the study basically showed that indoor air and normal exhaled breath contains more VOCs that the e-cigarette aerosol.
Tobacco cigarette smoke provided the samples containing highest concentrations of all compounds analyzed. Besides nicotine it contained benzene, toluene, xylenes, ethylbenzene and naphthalene in high abundance as well as other compounds such as isoprene, pent-1-ene, n-pentane, n-hexane, n-heptane and others.
This composition was in strong contrast with that of vapor from the e-cigarettes in which all these compounds were virtually absent except nicotine
Research shows that secondhand aerosol from vapes and e-cigarettes may expose bystanders to nicotine, heavy metals, ultrafine particulates, volatile organic compounds and other toxicants.


  • The findings of this work suggest that exhaled e-cigarette aerosol does not increase bystander exposure for phenolics and carbonyls above the levels observed in exhaled breaths of air, in contrast to the quantifiable levels of these analytes in exhaled conventional cigarette smoke.
  • Lorillard study


Myth ENDS - Flavor Danger

  • We look at 2 important questions: 1) Is vaping flavors toxic and 2) Are flavors motivating non-smoking teens to experiment with vaping?


2021: Truth Testimony in Netherlands pertaining to a potential flavour / flavor ban: Regulation of e-cigarette flavours – a response

Signed by 24 experts from around the world
Covers 12 key points


A well researched article that touches on many of the myths and fears about youth use of flavored vapor products.


We would like to point out that the finding is in a stark contrast to previous results.
The high levels only happen under dry puff conditions, something avoided by vapers as it is very unpleasant.

Myth ENDS - Formaldehyde is at dangerous levels

In realistic conditions, formaldehyde in e-cigarettes is lower than cigarette smoke.
High levels of formaldehyde in e-cigarettes are produced in unrealistic (dry puff) conditions and should be avoided in the laboratory setting.
While direct replications like this and studies with similar methods can offer useful comparisons, the main point of the paper isn’t as much about the results as it is about the methods. Before we can really answer the key questions, we need to consider why the method used matters so much.


Myth ENDS - Gateway to smoking

Myth ENDS - Heavy Metals at dangerous levels

2018: Truth Article: Heavy Metal

Studies like the 2018 one from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health claimed they found substantial levels of toxic heavy metals in eliquid and vapour. The results have then been used as part of overexcited lectures to the media by the likes of the lamentable Bonnie Halpern-Felsher. A study from researchers at West Virginia University pours cold water over the argument by finding that vapers’ blood and urine matches those who neither vape or smoke.
“The ‘significant amount’ of metals the authors reported they found were measured in ug/kg. In fact, they are so low that for some cases (chromium and lead) I calculated that you need to vape more than 100 ml per day in order to exceed the FDA limits for daily intake from inhalation medications.” He suggested that this happens because studies sometimes use concentration limits associated with constant intake, as opposed to just the breaths that include e-liquid vapor. According to Farsalinos, “humans take more than 17,000 breaths per day but only 400-600 puffs per day from an e-cigarette.” So when researchers calculations omit this fact, the results can appear drastically worse than they ought too.
Blood lead levels, and urinary cadmium, barium, and antimony levels were similar between participants who used e-cigarettes and participants who did not.
Based on currently available data, overall exposure to metals from EC use is not expected to be of significant health concern for smokers switching to EC use, but is an unnecessary source of exposure for never-smokers. Metal analysis should be expanded to more products and exposure can be further reduced through improvements in product quality and appropriate choice of materials.
Article about above study: Metals emitted from e-cigarettes are NOT a reason for health concern


Myth ENDS - Heart Disease caused by vaping

Given these issues, the editors are concerned that the study conclusion is unreliable.
The editors hereby retract the article from publication in Journal of the American Heart Association
  • News items regarding the retraction
USA Today A study claimed vaping doubles risk for heart attacks. It's been retracted for being 'unreliable'
USA Today Study linking vaping to heart attacks muddied amid spat between two tobacco researchers
Vaping 360 Journal Retracts "Unreliable" Glantz Study Tying Vaping to Heart Attacks
Comments and questions from experts around the world
Includes and excellent time line of events with links.
Dr Farsalinos: “Increasing the risk” means that someone is FIRST exposed to a condition (in this case, exposed to e-cigarette use) and THEN, BECAUSE OF THIS EXPOSURE, he/she develops disease. Both studies CANNOT provide any of this information to substantiate an increased risk. Both are cross-sectional surveys, meaning that they asked participants if they have heart disease and if they use e-cigarettes. The studies provide no information on whether e-cigarette use was initiated before (and how long before) or after the development of disease. What if participants used e-cigarettes after they developed the disease in order to quit smoking?
Letter encouraging retraction / correction by David B. Abrams, PhD; Kenneth Michael Cummings, PhD; George Davey Smith; Konstantinos Farsalinos, MD, MPH; Jonathan Foulds, PhD; Abigail Friedman, PhD; Thomas Glynn, PhD; Peter Hajek, PhD; Martin Jarvis, DSc OBE; Robert Kaestner, PhD; Ann McNeill, PhD; Marcus Munafò, PhD; Raymond Niaura, PhD; David Sweanor, JD; David Timberlake, PhD; Kenneth Warner, PhD


Professor Peter Hajek: “The study is reporting on a well-known short-term effect of nicotine – stiffening of arteries – that accompanies all types of stimulation. The same effect is generated by watching a thriller or a football match or sitting an exam. Drinking a cup of coffee actually produces a larger response of much longer duration. The key heart health risks of smoking are not caused by nicotine but by other chemicals in tobacco smoke that are not present in e-cigarette vapour.”


Myth ENDS - Marketing to Kids

Capital Research Center
Covers many of the accusations made towards the ENDS industry and compares them to several adult consumer products and adult activities.


Myths ENDS - Multiple Myths

  • Using the word "vaping" often makes people assume that it means ENDS and the use of nicotine products. The media, public health, and law makers compound the issue by not being clear on what they're talking about. Very often, these problems are not caused by nicotine products, but the use of drugs in electronic inhalation devices. This research project gives several examples of mystery illnesses and the causes.


  • Comments on several misperceptions from a study


  • 8 Things that you should know, Covers myths around EVALI etc.
  • Not surprisingly, there are lots of inaccuracies and misconceptions about e-cigarettes and vaping. This blog looks at some of the most common myths and provides the facts.


  • We read with serious concern the position article by Reynales-Shigematsu et al. about combustion-free nicotine delivery products and public health [1]. The authors not only fail to present a balanced overview of the risk-benefit ratio of these new technologies, but grossly misrepresent the existing evidence and ignore the broad consensus that Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS), Alternative Nicotine Delivery Systems (ANDS), and E-Cigs (electronic cigarettes or vaporizers) use is considerably less harmful than continuation of smoking [2-6]. By placing a greater emphasis on potential risks and disregarding possible benefits the authors fail to consider that ENDS, ANDS and E-Cigs use may represent an opportunity for public health.


  • This study is deeply flawed because it fails to consider the most likely explanation for the study findings: that people who use e-cigarettes more likely have a history of more intense smoking than people who do not use e-cigarettes. For example, one study found that while only 21% of adult smokers who did not vape were heavy smokers, 68% of adult smokers who did vape were heavy smokers (or had been heavy smokers).


  • In this blog, I examine an extraordinary claim by Professor Stanton Glantz of the University of California at San Francisco. Professor Glantz claims that the US public is right to believe that vaping is as harmful as smoking and that science is now catching up with public opinion.


Myth ENDS - Popcorn Lung caused by vaping

  • While almost anything is possible, there’s simply no evidence that vaping causes popcorn lung.


2019: Cancer Research UK: Does vaping cause popcorn lung?

  • No. There’s no good evidence that e-cigarettes could cause the lung condition called popcorn lung. There’s been no confirmed cases of popcorn lung reported in people who use e-cigarettes.


  • There is 750x more diacetyl in a pack of cigarettes than there is in a days worth of vaping nicotine fluid, and to date we have no confirmation that smokers are getting popcorn lung.



  • There's just one minor fact that is omitted completely in the article, as well as in all the media coverage.
  • That fact: All conventional cigarettes produce tobacco smoke that contains diacetyl, and the levels of diacetyl in cigarettes are a lot higher than those produced by e-cigarettes.


Myth ENDS - Youth use of vapor products


2021: Truth Testimony in Netherlands pertaining to a potential flavour / flavor ban: Regulation of e-cigarette flavours – a response

Signed by 24 experts from around the world
Covers 12 key points


Myth Nicotine - dangers and addiction

  • There are four nicotine myths perpetuated in modern culture that have no basis in fact.


  • As a result, the present SG's chapter on nicotine addiction, which purportedly "documents how nicotine compares with heroin and cocaine in its hold on users and its effects on the brain," is remarkably biased and misleading.


Myth THR - Articles give fuel to myths

  • A number of consumer groups and public health experts, have raised serious concerns about the bias and false claims made by a recent University of Bath study, which explored the Twitter activity around the eighth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the World Health Organisation (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.


Myth Videos about myths


Long video with evidence on vaping myths!


Shorter video with less evidence presented, but more common sense!


Bell jar experiment by Public Health England!

Graphics and Memes about Nicotine Myths

sets of ready to use graphic images and posts in multiple languages.


Bias

Possible explanation for the lack of unbiased research in the United States

Cotton Candy by age

There is a false accusation that Cotton Candy flavors are made to market ENDS products to children. The truth is, that adults find the flavor very appealing.


Important people who used nicotine

If nicotine causes brain damage, how do we explain the accomplishments of these people?


Suggestions of items to add to this page

Add seizure myth

  • The statistical associations between e-cigarette use and respiratory disease are driven by e-cigarette users who are also current or former smokers of combustible tobacco.
  • A striking feature of the data is that almost all e-cigarette users were either current or former smokers of combustible tobacco.
  • Among respondents who had never smoked combustible tobacco, we find no evidence that current or former e-cigarette use is associated with respiratory disease.
  • Link to PDF

More Information

  • Click on the category link below for more studies by topic on ENDS and Nicotine.