| Literature DB >> 27184265 |
Caroline Franck1, Kristian B Filion1,2,3, Jonathan Kimmelman4,5, Roland Grad6, Mark J Eisenberg7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Due to their similarity to tobacco cigarettes, electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) could play an important role in tobacco harm reduction. However, the public health community remains divided concerning the appropriateness of endorsing a device whose safety and efficacy for smoking cessation remain unclear. We identified the major ethical considerations surrounding the use of e-cigarettes for tobacco harm reduction, including product safety, efficacy for smoking cessation and reduction, use among non-smokers, use among youth, marketing and advertisement, use in public places, renormalization of a smoking culture, and market ownership. Overall, the safety profile of e-cigarettes is unlikely to warrant serious public health concerns, particularly given the known adverse health effects associated with tobacco cigarettes. As a result, it is unlikely that the population-level harms resulting from e-cigarette uptake among non-smokers would overshadow the public health gains obtained from tobacco harm reduction among current smokers. While the existence of a gateway effect for youth remains uncertain, e-cigarette use in this population should be discouraged. Similarly, marketing and advertisement should remain aligned with the degree of known product risk and should be targeted to current smokers. Overall, the available evidence supports the cautionary implementation of harm reduction interventions aimed at promoting e-cigarettes as attractive and competitive alternatives to cigarette smoking, while taking measures to protect vulnerable groups and individuals.Entities:
Keywords: E-cigarettes; Ethics; Harm reduction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27184265 PMCID: PMC4869264 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-016-0370-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1The risk/use equilibrium. Each point on this curve indicates the multiplier needed to achieve a constant level of population risk, given specific levels of decreased danger per user. For example, if 100 individuals used a product with full danger (for example, killing 100 % of users), 10 times that number (1000 individuals) would need to use a product that had 90 % decreased danger, to achieve an equal health problem (100 dead in each instance). The formula is Y = 100/100-X, where Y = multiplier and X = decrease in danger, expressed in percentages. If danger is 0.1 %, use would have to increase by 1000 times to produce a problem of the same magnitude as the full risk product (not plotted on figure). For a given risk on the curve, use that is increased by a smaller multiplier represents a public health benefit, and use that is increased by a larger multiplier represents a public health (population level) cost. Figure and legend reproduced from [47] with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Ethical considerations surrounding the availability and use of e-cigarettes
| Ethical considerations | Supporting arguments | Opposing arguments | Questions to direct future research |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tobacco harm reduction | |||
| Potential for smoking cessation | E-cigarettes may be as effective as the nicotine patch. | Inconclusive evidence of efficacy for smoking cessation. | What is the efficacy of nicotine and non-nicotine e-cigarettes for smoking cessation and reduction? |
| Potential for smoking reduction | Demonstrated in multiple studies. | Unlikely that cigarette reduction results in significant health benefits. | What is the long-term impact of dual use of e-cigarettes and tobacco cigarettes on health outcomes? |
| Product safety | |||
| Potential for long-term adverse effects | Unknown impact of long-term propylene glycol inhalation. | No documented serious adverse events to date. | What are the long-term safety implications of nicotine and non-nicotine e-cigarette use? |
| Propylene glycol inhalation causes short-term respiratory irritation. | |||
| Autonomy to use a product of unknown risk | Ethical imperative given informed consent. | Public health concerns trump individual rights. | How should consumer rights be weighed against public health concerns? |
| Use among non-smokers | |||
| Potential to lead to nicotine addiction | Perceived harmlessness may lead never smokers to initiate e-cigarettes. | No evidence for increased nicotine addiction to cause net public health harms. | What is the long-term health impact of nicotine addiction? |
| Potential gateway effect | Nicotine acts as a priming agent for the brain. | Unclear implications for transitioning to tobacco cigarettes. | How many non-smokers initiating e-cigarettes transition to other tobacco products, including cigarettes? |
| Use among youth | |||
| Potential to lead to nicotine addiction | Minors require protection. | No evidence of increased nicotine addiction causing net public health harms. | How many youth initiating e-cigarettes report continuous long-term product use (1 year or longer)? |
| E-liquid flavorings are attractive to youth. | |||
| Potential gateway effect | Nicotine is a priming agent for the brain. | Unclear implications for transitioning to tobacco cigarettes. | How many youth initiating e-cigarettes transition to other tobacco products, including cigarettes? |
| Nicotine poisoning among children | Increased calls to poison control centers. | None. | To what extent can the risk of nicotine poisoning among children be mitigated? |
| E-liquid flavors are appealing to youth. | |||
| Use in public places | |||
| Potential for passive vaping | Stem cell cytotoxicity. | Limited evidence that passive vaping poses significant health concerns. | What is the long-term impact of passive vaping and second-hand vapor exposure? |
| Aerosolized nicotine emissions. | |||
| Renormalized smoking culture | |||
| Potential to subvert decades of anti-smoking efforts | Increased acceptability of smoke-like vapor and smoking behavior. | No evidence that e-cigarettes would be conflated with tobacco cigarettes. | How are the increased awareness and use of e-cigarettes affecting perceptions of cigarette smoking? |
| Market ownership | |||
| Unethical collaboration with the tobacco industry | Public health endorsement of e-cigarettes increases tobacco company market share. | Possible necessity to collaborate with the tobacco industry to achieve public health gains. | What are the public health implications of tobacco industry ownership of major e-cigarette brands? |