A NEW study has suggested that a significant number of teens who try vaping have never actually smoked.
Researchers from the Tobacco Free Research Institute Ireland revealed that the number of 16 and 17-year-olds who had tried e-cigarettes had increased from 23 per cent in 2014 to 39 per cent in 2019.
The 39 per cent of adolescents who said they had tried e-cigarettes compares with 32 per cent who had tried smoking.
Only three per cent of teens say they vape to stop smoking
And 68 per cent of those who had tried e-cigarettes said that they had never tried smoking.
Teenagers said the main reasons they tried e-cigarettes were curiosity (66 per cent) and also because their friends were also vaping (29 per cent).
Only three per cent said they vaped to quit smoking.
These results come from figures taken from thousands of teenagers.
Meanwhile, researchers said that youngsters whose parents are smokers are 55 per cent more likely to try e-cigarettes.
The new research, presented at the European Respiratory Society International Congress in Barcelona, Spain, also found that these youngers were 51 per cent more likely to have tried smoking.
Professor Luke Clancy, director general of the Institute, said: “We have found increasing use of e-cigarettes in Irish teenagers and that’s a pattern that is emerging elsewhere in the world.
“There’s a perception that vaping is a better alternative to smoking, but our research shows that this doesn’t apply to teenagers who usually haven’t tried cigarettes prior to e-cigarettes.
“This indicates that, for teens, vaping is a route into nicotine addiction, rather than out of it.”
Lead Researcher Dr Joan Hanafin added: “We can see that the number of teenagers using e-cigarettes is changing fast, so we need to keep monitoring the situation in Ireland and around the world.
“We also plan to study social media to understand how this influences girls’ and boys’ vaping behaviour.”
TikTok influences teens to vape
Commenting on the study, Professor Jonathan Grigg, chair of the European Respiratory Society’s Tobacco Control Committee, said: “These findings are worrying, not just for teenagers in Ireland, but for families all around the world.”
Earlier this year, a separate report from Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) concluded that the proportion of children vaping is on the rise, with many being influenced by social media sites such as TikTok.
While it is illegal to sell vapes to under-18s, the proportion of children aged 11 to 17 currently vaping has jumped from four per cent in 2020 to seven per cent in 2022.
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