Vaping: Public Health, Social Media, and Toxicity.
Yehao SunPrital PrabhuDongmei LiScott McIntoshIrfan RahmanPublished in: Online journal of public health informatics (2024)
This viewpoint aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of vaping from various perspectives that contribute to the invention, development, spread, and consequences of e-cigarette products and vaping. Our analysis showed that the specific characteristics of e-cigarette products as well as marketing strategies, especially social media marketing, fostered the spread of vaping and the subsequent effects on human health and toxicity. We analyzed the components of e-cigarette devices and e-liquids, including the latest variants whose impacts were often overlooked. The different forms of nicotine, including salts and freebase nicotine, tobacco-derived nicotine, tobacco-free nicotine, and cooling agents (WS3 and WS23), have brought more choices for vapers along with more ways for e-cigarette manufacturers to advertise false understandings and present a greater threat to vapers' health. Our work emphasized the products of brands that have gained significant influence recently, which are contributing to severe public health issues. On the other hand, we also discussed in detail the toxicity of e-liquid components and proposed a toxicity mechanism. We also noticed that nicotine and other chemicals in e-liquids promote each other's negative effects through the oxidative stress and inflammatory nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) pathway, a mechanism leading to pulmonary symptoms and addiction. The impact of government regulations on the products themselves, including flavor bans or regulations, has been limited. Therefore, we proposed further interventions or harm reduction strategies from a public health perspective.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- social media
- public health
- oxidative stress
- nuclear factor
- health information
- human health
- toll like receptor
- risk assessment
- global health
- dna damage
- climate change
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- healthcare
- induced apoptosis
- immune response
- physical activity
- pulmonary hypertension
- signaling pathway
- early onset
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- transcription factor
- depressive symptoms
- health promotion