Concerning Statistics of Users Now Use E-Cigarettes, Warns Global Health Organization

Vaping devices E-cigarette usage

Over 100 million people, including at bare minimum 15 million youth, now utilize e-cigarettes, fueling a fresh trend of nicotine habit, as stated by current worldwide medical findings.

Minors are, on average, nine times more likely than adults to use e-cigarettes, per existing global figures.

Electronic cigarettes are propelling a "recent wave" of nicotine dependency, remarked a senior health expert. "They are marketed as harm reduction but, truthfully, are addicting kids on nicotine at younger ages and threaten compromising decades of improvement."

Young People Being 'Focused On'

"Countless of citizens are ceasing, or avoiding tobacco use due to tobacco control efforts by states across the planet," he commented.

"As a reaction to this substantial improvement, the tobacco business is pushing back with novel nicotine products, actively focusing on adolescents. Governments must respond quicker and more vigorously in applying proven tobacco-control policies," the representative further stated.

The vaping figures are an estimate since numerous states - 109 in total, and numerous in Africa and Asian regions - fail to collect statistics.

Based on the report, as of this past February this period, at minimum 86 million e-cigarette users were adults, primarily in developed states.

And at least 15 million adolescents between the ages of 13 and 15 already engage in vaping, according to surveys from 123 countries.

While many states have tried to introduce e-cigarette rules to tackle underage vaping in recent years, by the end of 2024, 62 nations still had no policy in effect, and 74 nations had no age limit at which e-cigarettes can be acquired, says the medical organization.

Simultaneously, tobacco use has been decreasing - from an approximated 1.38 billion individuals in 2000 to 1.2 billion in 2024.

Occurrence of tobacco use among women dropped the greatest - from 11% in 2010 to 6.6% in 2024.

For men, the drop was from 41.4% in 2010 to 32.5% in 2024.

But a fifth of grown-ups globally even now employs tobacco.

Smoking is associated to many illnesses, such as cancer.

Experts say vaping is considerably less harmful than cigarettes, and can help you cease smoking. It is not recommended for non-smokers.

Electronic cigarettes do not burn tobacco and do not create black substance or CO, a pair of the most harmful substances in tobacco fumes. They include nicotine, which might be dependency-creating.

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Brenda Harmon
Brenda Harmon

Elara is a seasoned hiker and nature photographer who shares her passion for the outdoors through engaging stories and practical advice.