boutons_deux
07-26-2019, 11:39 AM
Like BigPharma pushing synthetic opioids hard, for profit, Juul, etc are doing the same
Kristin Beauparlant noticed a change.
The hockey player began getting gassed more easily on the ice.
Beauparlant could hear her son’s coughing and wheezing from the stands.
But it was his demeanor that scared her most.
Cade :lol Beauparlant’s anxiety and mood swings worsened,
his outbursts so sudden and so explosive that his mother said she came to fear him.
It took more than three years — and help from a renowned pediatrician — to understand what was going on:
Her son was addicted to nicotine, delivered by a Juul, a sleek e-cigarette that looks like a USB drive.
pediatricians report seeing teens who behave less like tobacco users and more like patients with substance-abuse disorders.
After more than three years of vaping daily, Beauparlant was diagnosed with restrictive lung disease.
they are witnessing for the first time the damage that repeated exposure to high levels of nicotine wreaks on young bodies.
Many products, including Juul,
allow users to ingest far more nicotine than they would with traditional cigarettes.
Concerns over teen use fueled a ban on e-cigarette sales that was adopted in June by San Francisco (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/06/26/san-francisco-bans-e-cigarette-sales-curb-teenage-vaping/?utm_term=.c762d49482bb) — a move that made it the first major city to prohibit the nicotine-delivery devices.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/helpless-to-the-draw-of-nicotine-doctors-parents-and-schools-grapple-with-teens-addicted-to-e-cigarettes/2019/07/25/e1e8ac9c-830a-11e9-933d-7501070ee669_story.html?utm_term=.5f8ef6c189ca&wpisrc=nl_most&wpmm=1
Kristin Beauparlant noticed a change.
The hockey player began getting gassed more easily on the ice.
Beauparlant could hear her son’s coughing and wheezing from the stands.
But it was his demeanor that scared her most.
Cade :lol Beauparlant’s anxiety and mood swings worsened,
his outbursts so sudden and so explosive that his mother said she came to fear him.
It took more than three years — and help from a renowned pediatrician — to understand what was going on:
Her son was addicted to nicotine, delivered by a Juul, a sleek e-cigarette that looks like a USB drive.
pediatricians report seeing teens who behave less like tobacco users and more like patients with substance-abuse disorders.
After more than three years of vaping daily, Beauparlant was diagnosed with restrictive lung disease.
they are witnessing for the first time the damage that repeated exposure to high levels of nicotine wreaks on young bodies.
Many products, including Juul,
allow users to ingest far more nicotine than they would with traditional cigarettes.
Concerns over teen use fueled a ban on e-cigarette sales that was adopted in June by San Francisco (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/06/26/san-francisco-bans-e-cigarette-sales-curb-teenage-vaping/?utm_term=.c762d49482bb) — a move that made it the first major city to prohibit the nicotine-delivery devices.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/helpless-to-the-draw-of-nicotine-doctors-parents-and-schools-grapple-with-teens-addicted-to-e-cigarettes/2019/07/25/e1e8ac9c-830a-11e9-933d-7501070ee669_story.html?utm_term=.5f8ef6c189ca&wpisrc=nl_most&wpmm=1