Hàng trăm trẻ em từ trung học và trung học việc sử dụng thuốc lá đã giảm mạnh nhưng có một xu hướng đáng lo ngại đang gia tăng: sử dụng túi nicotine thay vì thuốc lá. #KidsAreDitchingCigarettes #NicotinePouches #TobaccoUseDecline
Theo cuộc khảo sát mới nhất của CDC, việc sử dụng thuốc lá đã đạt đến mức thấp nhất trong 25 năm qua, nhưng tồn tại một xu hướng đáng lo ngại. Việc sử dụng điện tử giảm trong số trẻ em, cũng như sử dụng thuốc lá và xì gà và kèo nước. Tuy nhiên, việc sử dụng túi nicotine đã tăng lên.
Túi nicotine không chứa lá thuốc thật sự, mặc dù nicotine có thể được phát tán từ cây thuốc lá. Túi nicotine được làm từ bột bao gồm nicotine (một chất gây nghiện và nguy hiểm) và hương liệu. Người dùng đặt chúng giữa lợi và môi, và nicotine được hấp thụ qua lợi và niêm mạc miệng khi bột tan chảy.
Túi nicotine đã trở thành một vấn đề chiến tranh văn hóa trong vài năm qua, với các nhà lập pháp bảo thủ, bao gồm cả tướng Mike Collins và Marjorie Taylor Green, nhận định chúng như là một vấn đề chống quản lý. #AntiRegulation #NicotinePouches Hãy duy trì công việc kiểm tra, cần cảnh giác để giảm sử dụng tất cả các loại sản phẩm thuốc lá, đặc biệt với trẻ em.
Dữ liệu từ cuộc khảo sát “National Youth Tobacco Survey” đã cho thấy rằng việc sử dụng sản phẩm thuốc lá giảm, nhưng nhu cầu của trẻ em sử dụng túi nicotine đang tăng. Chi tiết từ báo cáo #CDCMMWR.
A new survey indicates tobacco use has hit its lowest point among middle and high school students in 25 years, but there is a troubling trend on the rise.
E-cigarette usage declined among kids, as did cigarette and cigar smoking, and hookahs, according to the CDC’s annual National Youth Tobacco Survey. In fact, overall tobacco use saw a marked drop from the 2023 poll, with an estimated 2.25 million students having consumed a tobacco product in the past 30 days, compared to 2.8 million students the year before. But one product saw an increase in usage: nicotine pouches.
Unlike cigarettes, cigars, or pipes, nicotine pouches don’t contain any actual tobacco leaves, though the nicotine they contain can be derived from tobacco plants. Even so, for the purpose of the survey, the CDC still classifies them as a tobacco product. Nicotine pouches are composed of a powder made up of nicotine (which by itself is extremely addictive and dangerous) and flavorings. Users insert them between their gums and lips, and the nicotine is absorbed through the gums and mouth lining as the powder dissolves, according to the CDC.
The pouches have become something of a culture war issue over the past few years, with conservative heavy hitters, including congresspeople Mike Collins and Marjorie Taylor Green, adopting them as an anti-regulation cause célèbre. Though they’ve been on the market for decades, their popularity has exploded over the past decade. One study found sales of the product increased over 300% between 2016 and 2020, while tobacco company Phillip Morris, which owns the popular Zyn brand, reported a 78% increase in sales of the pouches in the fourth quarter of 2023.
Tucker Carlson even told comedian/podcaster/walking haircut nightmare Theo Von that he believed the pouches enhanced his acumen in the boudoir. If you need a scare before Halloween, just try picturing that. Horrifying. It should also be noted that this claim is almost definitely false. Study after study has found a link between tobacco use and erectile dysfunction, including e-cigarettes. Even without a delivery mechanism that involves tobacco, nicotine constricts blood vessels, which can contribute to sexual dysfunction.
Now, we know that the trend has reached young people. In 2023, the pouches were the fourth most popular tobacco product among the middle and high school students, behind vapes, cigarettes, and cigars. This year, they’ve moved into second place, with 1.4% of replying students saying they had used them in the past 30 days, up from 1.2% the previous year. Vapes remain, by far, the most popular product, but their usage declined from 7.7% to 5.9%. Cigarettes came in third (hitting the lowest rate ever recorded by the survey, which the CDC has conducted since 1999), followed by cigars.
Current tobacco product use by US middle & high school students continued to decline in 2024, reaching the lowest level since 1999. However, 2.25 million students reported using tobacco products. Youth use of any tobacco product is unsafe. More in @CDCMMWR https://t.co/jFMkQaX4wf pic.twitter.com/TvwwAPIKIk
— CDC Tobacco Free (@CDCTobaccoFree) October 17, 2024
Experimenting with tobacco now seems less likely to lead to a habit. In this year’s survey, 42.9% of students who had ever used a tobacco product said they had done so in the past month, down from 46.7% the previous year.
“We’re headed in the right direction when it comes to reducing tobacco product use among our nation’s youth,” said Brian King, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products, in a statement. “But we can’t take our foot off the gas. Continued vigilance is needed to continue to reduce all forms of tobacco product use among youth. Addressing disparities remains an essential part of these efforts to ensure that we don’t leave anyone behind.”
Each year, the CDC conducts the National Youth Tobacco Survey through an online questionnaire, which middle and high school students (grades six through 12) voluntarily fill out on a self-administered basis. For the 2024 survey, data was collected on May 22, with 29,861 students taking part.
You should all know this by now, but nicotine use is tied to a wide variety of health problems (on top of ED), including hardening of artery walls, threats to pregnancy, and even affecting brain development in people under 25. Just as a general rule, if Tucker Carlson likes something, it probably produces human misery, and that’s a lesson we should be teaching our kids.
[ad_2]