Debunking The Myth of The Teen Vaping to Smoking “Gateway”

Teens who use e-cigarettes are more likely to smoke combustible tobacco. As a result, governments have to strictly regulate vaping products to prevent children from progressing to a deadly cigarette habit.

This is the much-ballyhooed vaping-to-smoking “gateway” many tobacco-control advocates have warned about for years.

“Young people who had ever used e-cigarettes had seven times higher odds of becoming smokers one year later compared with those who had never vaped,” The Truth Initiative declared in January 2021. “The link between vaping and future cigarette use serves as a stark warning for the need to regulate all nicotine products to protect youth…”

Although this gateway hypothesis remains popular, it’s hindered by one critical detail: it’s wrong. Recent research shows that the few teenagers who experiment with vaping do not become regular cigarette smokers, undermining the campaign to further restrict adult access to nicotine vaping products.

A phony gateway effect

To understand the flaw in this gateway idea, we need to distinguish between experimenting with cigarettes and regular smoking. Many studies have looked at the association between teen vaping and later smoking initiation, and some of them have indeed shown that youth who try e-cigarettes do start smoking.

But how many of those teens continue to smoke? That’s the crucial follow-up question the authors of a new study published by JAMA Network Open answered. The researchers analyzed the vaping and smoking behavior of 8,671 adolescents, between 12 and 17 years old, from 2015 to 2019.

As previous studies had found, this one also showed that youth who tried vaping were more likely to try cigarettes. However, the authors concluded, “few adolescents are likely to continue smoking after initiation regardless of baseline e-cigarette use.” Overall, they added, “few adolescents started smoking cigarettes … and even fewer continued smoking …”

Regardless of vaping status, just over four percent of teens started smoking cigarettes and less than 2.5 percent continued smoking. Two previous studies, one from 2012 and another from 2019, also found “that few youth experimenters become regular or established smokers.” In an ideal world, no teenagers would vape or smoke; nonetheless, the new study points to an important conclusion, according to its authors:

“Although a positive association between e-cigarette use and cigarette initiation has been reported by many studies, at the population level, the prevalence of past 30-day cigarette smoking among youth and young adults has steadily decreased in the era of e-cigarettes.” [emphasis mine]

The smoking-to-vaping diversion

Put another way, as vaping has grown more popular, the rate of teen smoking has continued to drop. Other recent research has shown that the relationship between vaping and smoking goes in the opposite direction; the few teenagers who vape were smokers before they tried e-cigarettes. The authors of a January 2021 study summarized this “diversion” effect as follows:

“Not only does the current study demonstrate that actual data are much more consistent with a diversion effect than a catalyst effect, but the magnitude of this effect is somewhat large … This is consistent with other recent research showing that declines in cigarette use have accelerated after the introduction of ECs.”

Putting this research together leads to a clear conclusion. The vaping-to-smoking “gateway” doesn’t exist. It’s a myth propped up by misleading statistics, nothing more.

 

 

Recent Articles

North Carolina might save us all. A new state bill may be the industry’s best option to save itself from demise when new federal cannabinoid bans take effect in November. And it could use your support.
Hemp is often considered for the things that it is not. It is not intoxicating, it is not illegal, and it is not marijuana. However, now we are seeing a focus back to what it can be. The plant is moving into the level of wine and chocolate and becoming a movement and a culture.
It’s been several months since President Donald Trump signed an executive order to reschedule cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III within the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). On paper, the recent executive order, entitled “Increasing Medical Marijuana and Cannabidiol Research,” is a huge step in the right direction for cannabis smokers across the country.
For years, we’ve been told that this industry is the Wild West: a place where the only law amounts to whatever the guy with the gun says. But over the last 12 months, state governments have passed a spate of new regulations that promise to swap the relative lawlessness of poor enforcement of vague rules with real law and order.
With a last name like hers, it’s only fitting that Liz Grow ended up in the cannabis industry. Born and raised in Texas, Liz returned to her home state almost a decade ago to start Grow Haus Media with her husband, producer Patrick Pope. However, her personal journey with cannabis started back in 2011.
Kunda Wellness isn’t your average CBD brand. It was founded by two Doctors of Physical Therapy who have spent their careers treating pelvic floor dysfunction and helping people reconnect with a part of their body that’s often overlooked, dismissed, or wrapped in shame.
“Winter rain Now tell me why Summers fade And roses die.” – Bob Weir, “Weather Report Suite”
For years, Jennifer Mansour felt them coming. “You can’t stop one,” she said. “As soon as I’d notice that the lights felt a little too bright, I knew I was done for. I’d tell my boss, and then I’d get in the car and pop on my sunglasses because I could feel another one coming on, and I couldn’t do a thing to stop it.”