Vaping is dangerous: Indian government bans electronic cigarettes
On 27 November 2019, the bill to ban electronic cigarettes was passed by the Lok Sabha. Here are a few reasons why the Government of India decided to take this step.
On 27 November 2019, the bill to ban electronic cigarettes was passed by the Lok Sabha. Here are a few reasons why the Government of India decided to take this step.
According to a study published in the Journal of Sleep Research, smoking e-cigarette is associated with higher risk of deteriorating sleep.
A new research published in the journal Tobacco Control has revealed that vaping is linked to wheezing in adults, which is a precursor to serious health conditions.
Cherry flavoured e-cigarettes may expose vapers to significantly higher levels of the respiratory irritant benzaldehyde than other flavours, suggests the laboratory study.
Revealed - why e-cigarettes can't really help you quit smoking
Keep your kids away from e-cigarettes by talking to them frankly
The study conducted at American Thoracic Society suggested that the characteristics of these e-cigarette elements, including their delivery systems, combustion apparatuses, and the composition of the nicotine solutions they contain may affect the levels of potentially hazardous substances in the vapor they produce.
Evidence backing the notion that electronic cigarettes are effective for long-term smoking cessation is lacking, finds a new study.
In the study, cultured human airway epithelial cells were exposed to various doses of the 13 e-cigarette liquid flavours for 30 minutes or 24 hours.
Strong flavours in e-cigarettes worsen your health
E-cigarettes generate the same dangerous chemicals found in traditional nicotine cigarettes: Study
Are e-cigarettes exposing more number of kids to nicotine?
Switching to e-cigarettes can help you quit smoking
Could electronic cigarettes lead to harder drugs?
E-cigarettes useless for cancer patients?
Are WHO's plans to crackdown on electronic cigarettes justified?
129 public health experts from 31 countries don't think so. And they have written a letter to Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, urging her to curb the use of electronic cigarettes.
Should electronic cigarettes be banned from advertising on Twitter, Facebook?
On 27 November 2019, the bill to ban electronic cigarettes was passed by the Lok Sabha. Here are a few reasons why the Government of India decided to take this step.
According to a study published in the Journal of Sleep Research, smoking e-cigarette is associated with higher risk of deteriorating sleep.
A new research published in the journal Tobacco Control has revealed that vaping is linked to wheezing in adults, which is a precursor to serious health conditions.
Cherry flavoured e-cigarettes may expose vapers to significantly higher levels of the respiratory irritant benzaldehyde than other flavours, suggests the laboratory study.
Revealed - why e-cigarettes can't really help you quit smoking
Keep your kids away from e-cigarettes by talking to them frankly
The study conducted at American Thoracic Society suggested that the characteristics of these e-cigarette elements, including their delivery systems, combustion apparatuses, and the composition of the nicotine solutions they contain may affect the levels of potentially hazardous substances in the vapor they produce.
Evidence backing the notion that electronic cigarettes are effective for long-term smoking cessation is lacking, finds a new study.
In the study, cultured human airway epithelial cells were exposed to various doses of the 13 e-cigarette liquid flavours for 30 minutes or 24 hours.
Strong flavours in e-cigarettes worsen your health
E-cigarettes generate the same dangerous chemicals found in traditional nicotine cigarettes: Study
Are e-cigarettes exposing more number of kids to nicotine?
Switching to e-cigarettes can help you quit smoking
Could electronic cigarettes lead to harder drugs?
E-cigarettes useless for cancer patients?
Are WHO's plans to crackdown on electronic cigarettes justified?
129 public health experts from 31 countries don't think so. And they have written a letter to Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, urging her to curb the use of electronic cigarettes.
Should electronic cigarettes be banned from advertising on Twitter, Facebook?