Customer Eric Trotter "vapes" at the Vapor Spot in
Westwood.
Customer Eric Trotter "vapes" at the Vapor Spot in
Westwood. (Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles…)
Customers at the Vapor Spot in Los Angeles puff on
electronic vaporizers in an environment that looks like a cross between a
swanky bar and a pharmacy, with black-shirted staffers tending frosted-glass
countertops and hundreds of dropper bottles of "e-juice" lined up on
the shelves.
The aroma inside is mildly sweet -- not what you might
expect from a store full of people indulging in a nicotine habit.
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| Buy Electronic Cigarettes Online |
For The Record
Los Angeles Times Thursday, July 11, 2013 Home Edition Main
News Part A Page 4 Sports Desk 1 inches; 33 words Type of Material: Correction
E-cigarettes: An article in the July 6 Saturday section
about the debate over the use of electronic cigarettes omitted the first name
of John "JJ" Jenkins, owner of the Vapor Spot in Westwood.
Smokers have been banished from most public places, forced
to nurse their addiction in private or outdoors.
But what about vapers, the name for people who draw on
electronic cigarettes that spew no actual smoke? Instead, they inhale -- and
then exhale -- e-juice as a vapor containing liquid nicotine, flavored with
such tastes as fresh tobacco and cotton candy.
Should they be subject to the same restrictions?
Vapers argue that the emissions from a few ingredients must
be cleaner than the thousands of charred chemicals flowing from the average
cigarette. Critics worry that the devices and the components of their
associated vapor are "untried, untested and unknown," in the words of
Stella Bialous, president of the San Francisco consulting firm Tobacco Policy
International.
In the California Senate, lawmakers recently approved a bill
that would ban vaping from every place smoking is already prohibited. The
measure awaits discussion in the Assembly. UCLA has already taken that step,
outlawing e-cigarettes on April 22, the same day it shut out their smoky
cousins.
The laws would prevent vapers like 30-year-old Alexis, a
Vapor Spot customer who did not want to share her last name because her family
doesn't know she ever smoked, from inhaling in her acting classes. For now, she
can vape with no problem, though she used to have to walk outside to smoke.
"I love it," she says. "It doesn't make me cough or smell."
Vapor Spot bartender Chris Rogers says most customers come
in to quit smoking. He started running after switching from smoking to vaping.
"I feel healthier, I'm more energetic," he says.
The problem is that little is known about the precise
dangers of being in the same space as a vaper indulging their e-habit. Bialous
says few studies have been done, and they were small and focused on a few
brands. Personal vaporizers, and the "juice," which is liquid laced
with nicotine, in them, are so different from one another that the emissions of
one may not match those of another.
In 2009, the FDA released results of a study on two kinds of
e-cigarettes, reporting the presence of small levels of several toxins in the
cartridges. For example, one sample contained 1% diethylene glycol, a component
of antifreeze.
But thus far, no studies have shown that large amounts of
dangerous chemicals are released into the air, says Dr. Michael Siegel, a
professor at the Boston University School of Public Health.
"Unlike tobacco smoke, the vapor dissipates very
quickly," he says. "It looks like it's probably very minor
risk."
However, there is a social risk, Bialous points out, in that
vapers drawing on stick-like objects and puffing out a smoke-like substance
looks a lot like smokers, and may serve to normalize the habit again. Might
kids be attracted to a product enjoyed by the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio?
"So far, there is no evidence that kids find this particularly cool,"
Siegel says, though that "could change."
Even when it's technically allowed, some e-cigarette users
avoid vaping in social situations. "I just don't feel comfortable going
into public places and vaping, because it looks like you're smoking," says
Brian Worthy, owner of the Vapor-Mart in Los Angeles. He doesn't want to upset
bystanders, so he vapes only indoors at his home or store.
Many vapers aren't particularly worried that their habit
might be outlawed in public places.
"I don't think it will affect me too much," says
Lee Madeloni, a musician who was trying flavors in the Vapor Spot, not far from
UCLA, on a recent afternoon. "I'm pretty respectful anyway." He
already avoids vaping when dining with others, for example. And on an airplane,
he sneaks a quick puff and blows the vapor down toward the floor -- fellow
travelers may not even notice.
The bustling Vapor Spot attracts 18-year-olds to seniors,
but mostly people in their 20s and 30s, Jenkins says. The
blue-and-orange-walled store, which opened in 2009, was the first
brick-and-mortar vape store in the country, he says. Customers can sit at one
of six "bars" with a bartender to try the different flavors of juice.
Vapers note that their e-choice is still less harmful than
cigarettes, and more pleasant in taste and smell, even if they must go outside
to indulge. Nonetheless, there is still risk to the person puffing on an
e-cigarette, if the juice contains nicotine. Even without the chemicals in
traditional cigarettes, nicotine is bad for cardiovascular health and pregnant
women, Siegel says.
Article Credit: www.latimes.com

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