I owe an apology to the e-cigarette! The U.S. CDC has stood at attention, what about the others
From:
Tech Company Date:05-26 1327 Belong to:Industry Trends
This is probably the best holiday gift that e-cigarette practitioners around the world receive before the Spring Festival.
Oh no, Americans don't just celebrate the Spring Festival, but this does not affect the joy of this article.
The Wall Street Journal reported today that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has now withdrawn a broad recommendation to advise the public not to use e-cigarettes when the cause of vaping disease in the United States has not been determined.
This withdrawal is of great significance.
We attach a screenshot of the original report of the Wall Street Journal.
.jpg)
Since the outbreak of thousands of lung diseases caused by electronic atomization in the United States last summer, the CDC has recommended that people should avoid using electronic cigarettes altogether during investigations of lung disease outbreaks related to this behavior.
However, in this weekly update of the epidemic on January 17, the CDC quietly deleted the broad recommendation of sweeping a large swath of the stick.
The CDC removed from its website guidelines that people should stop using e-cigarettes if they are worried about the disease.
The agency said in September that people should stop using e-cigarettes and electronic atomization products. It has now narrowed the scope of recommendations and warned people that they should stop using products containing THC, especially those that come from illegal channels.
CDC has previously notified that data from patient reports and product sample tests indicate that e-cigarettes or e-vaporization products containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), especially from friends, family, in person or online dealers and other informal channels The products are related to most cases of lung disease and play a major role in the epidemic.
This is equivalent to the exclusion of nicotine e-cigarettes, but it does not mean that THC should be a backstop for lung diseases. After research and testing by CDC, it was found that the illegally added vitamin E in THC is closely related to disease outbreaks.
Further investigation showed that the vitamin E acetate in some illegal THC cartridges was closely related to the outbreak of the disease, and no vitamin E acetate was found in the lung fluid of people without lung disease.
This means that the pot of death from lung disease caused by smoking nicotine e-cigarettes has been completely removed by the CDC, which has a huge impact on the entire industry, and it is officially washed out.
Blue Hole checked the CDC's weekly epidemic update recommendations and found some interesting changes. CDC is indeed a professional and rigorous institution.
On September 4, the CDC said that if you are concerned about specific health risks, please consider avoiding e-cigarette products.
On September 26, the CDC said that stopping the use of electronic cigarettes and atomizing devices is the best way to prevent it without knowing the specific cause of the electronic atomization disease.
On October 11, the CDC recommended avoiding the use of e-cigarettes or e-cigarette products, especially products containing THC.
On November 8, CDC focused its research on products containing THC.
On November 9, the CDC said that vitamin E acetate, an additive used in THC and other electronic atomization products, may be the culprit in the outbreak of lung diseases related to electronic atomization in the United States.
On November 22, the CDC advised people not to use electronic atomization products containing THC. Vitamin E acetate, a thickener used in some THC electronic cigarette products, is related to cases of lung injury.
On January 17, the CDC officially withdrew its recommendation that people not use e-cigarettes.
Judging from the current electronic atomization lung diseases, the number is decreasing, and the growth rate is also slowing down. The CDC believes that it may be caused by three reasons.
1. Due to the rapid response of public health, public awareness of the risks associated with the use of electronic cigarettes or electronic atomization products containing THC has increased.
2. Vitamin E acetate has been removed in some products.
3. Law enforcement actions related to certain illegal products.
The above is the main details of CDC's disclosure of electronic atomization mysterious lung disease. It can be seen that within 4 months, CDC is fast-tracking, and finally basically locked the vitamin E in THC as the culprit of lung disease.
The whole investigation was like a scrabble, and the truth surfaced bit by bit.
Wang Shibei set the Central Plains Day, and the family sacrifice never forgot to tell Nai Weng.
After all, there must be a clear and rigorous statement that concerns the employment of hundreds of thousands of people and the use of tens of millions of e-cigarette users, as well as thousands of cases of mysterious lung disease.
But in the past four months, some states in the United States and some countries in the world have issued many blindly following and rash bans on e-cigarettes.
Let's start with some states in the United States. Facing the outbreak of the epidemic, some states in the United States have taken some actions to resolve the outbreak.
The governor of Rhode Island signed an executive order instructing the state's health department to formulate emergency regulations to prohibit the sale of flavored e-cigarette products in the state.
The governor of Massachusetts called for a four-month temporary ban on the sale of all e-cigarettes and e-cigarette products in his state in response to the outbreak.
Michigan bans the sale of flavored e-cigarettes, while New York state bans most flavored e-cigarettes. San Francisco became the first city in the United States to effectively ban all e-cigarette sales in June.
However, now that the CDC's investigation is basically clear, it is not known whether the governors of these states will reflect on the emergency ban on e-cigarettes at that time and whether they will be withdrawn.
Two countries also performed very well during this period.
India announced a total ban on e-cigarettes in September. The production, manufacturing, import and export, transportation, sales, storage and advertising of e-cigarettes in India are all illegal.
The most powerful is the Philippines.
On November 20, Philippine President Duterte stated that the Philippines will ban e-cigarettes and will arrest anyone who smokes e-cigarettes.
Duterte said, I will ban e-cigarettes. Do you know why? Because e-cigarettes are poisonous, the government has the power to implement measures to protect the public health and public interest of the Philippines.
You know, the Philippines also said in 2018 that the government officially decided to make e-cigarettes a legal harm reduction product.
E-cigarettes were still your sweetie last year, and they will become Mrs. Niu this year.
Where are you going to make sense?
Of course, we also fully understand that the outside world has a lot of strangeness to this emerging e-cigarette industry, the industry is not long, and the market volume is still growing.
Electronic cigarettes and electronic atomization are a brand-new industry in themselves. Authoritative organizations including CDC need to spend time on research and uation. For more people who eat melons, it is necessary to accurately know and accurately describe and understand at the first time. It's also more difficult.
Even many Chinese media do not understand the e-cigarette industry, so that they have been reporting the US epidemic with the death of e-cigarettes.
Du Niang was shocking.
.jpg)
In fact, when the media translates vaping into e-cigarettes, it is already not rigorous.
Vaping is a very broad atomization behavior. The things that can be atomized include nicotine, CBD, and THC mentioned by CDC. Therefore, a more accurate translation is electronic atomization that is lethal.
We also found that some domestic media like to report the illegal operation of IQOS cartridges as illegal trading of electronic cigarettes. This makes e-cigarette practitioners want to cry, and also makes users who do not understand the industry feel confused. Isn't it illegal to smoke? Why are you still producing?
The conventional practice in the industry is that IQOS-type heat-not-burn products are called new tobacco, and Juul-type e-liquid atomization products are called electronic cigarettes.
We also hope that more media can report on the e-cigarette industry more accurately after in-depth understanding.
Now that the CDC has deleted the ban on the use of e-cigarettes, then, for other countries, states, and some news media that have thrown the pot to e-cigarettes, should you also learn from the CDC's standing upright?
CDC's self-renewal and self-repair capabilities are very strong. From the initial comprehensive prohibition suggestion to the frivolous investigation, the culprit is finally determined and then updated again, which makes e-cigarette practitioners very comfortable.
Although the New Deal for e-cigarettes in the U.S. prohibits changing most flavored products for e-cigarettes, and although the U.S. still has a PMTA policy that ends in May, seeing the CDC’s timely self-repair and Trump’s organization of various organizations to the White House to collectively Tobacco practitioners all believe that the industry will become more and more perfect, and will be more and more recognized in the supervision and misunderstanding.
Some American politicians are eager to stand in line to confuse e-vaporizing lung disease with juvenile addiction. The two-pronged ban on e-cigarettes may eventually lead to unemployment in the industry and repopulation of black market products.
At the same time, we also sincerely suggest that some media should amend e-cigarette deaths as e-cigarette deaths, and stop defining smuggling cartridges as e-cigarette smuggling, and stop throwing these pots to e-cigarettes.
The apology for owing e-cigarettes in this article only refers to the misunderstanding of the e-vaporization lung disease incident in the United States. Please do not expand your understanding.
In the end, you will find: the more you understand, the more awe.
.jpg)
Happy Chinese New Year to all e-cigarette operators and readers of Blue Hole
Oh no, Americans don't just celebrate the Spring Festival, but this does not affect the joy of this article.
The Wall Street Journal reported today that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has now withdrawn a broad recommendation to advise the public not to use e-cigarettes when the cause of vaping disease in the United States has not been determined.
This withdrawal is of great significance.
We attach a screenshot of the original report of the Wall Street Journal.
.jpg)
Since the outbreak of thousands of lung diseases caused by electronic atomization in the United States last summer, the CDC has recommended that people should avoid using electronic cigarettes altogether during investigations of lung disease outbreaks related to this behavior.
However, in this weekly update of the epidemic on January 17, the CDC quietly deleted the broad recommendation of sweeping a large swath of the stick.
The CDC removed from its website guidelines that people should stop using e-cigarettes if they are worried about the disease.
The agency said in September that people should stop using e-cigarettes and electronic atomization products. It has now narrowed the scope of recommendations and warned people that they should stop using products containing THC, especially those that come from illegal channels.
CDC has previously notified that data from patient reports and product sample tests indicate that e-cigarettes or e-vaporization products containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), especially from friends, family, in person or online dealers and other informal channels The products are related to most cases of lung disease and play a major role in the epidemic.
This is equivalent to the exclusion of nicotine e-cigarettes, but it does not mean that THC should be a backstop for lung diseases. After research and testing by CDC, it was found that the illegally added vitamin E in THC is closely related to disease outbreaks.
Further investigation showed that the vitamin E acetate in some illegal THC cartridges was closely related to the outbreak of the disease, and no vitamin E acetate was found in the lung fluid of people without lung disease.
This means that the pot of death from lung disease caused by smoking nicotine e-cigarettes has been completely removed by the CDC, which has a huge impact on the entire industry, and it is officially washed out.
Blue Hole checked the CDC's weekly epidemic update recommendations and found some interesting changes. CDC is indeed a professional and rigorous institution.
On September 4, the CDC said that if you are concerned about specific health risks, please consider avoiding e-cigarette products.
On September 26, the CDC said that stopping the use of electronic cigarettes and atomizing devices is the best way to prevent it without knowing the specific cause of the electronic atomization disease.
On October 11, the CDC recommended avoiding the use of e-cigarettes or e-cigarette products, especially products containing THC.
On November 8, CDC focused its research on products containing THC.
On November 9, the CDC said that vitamin E acetate, an additive used in THC and other electronic atomization products, may be the culprit in the outbreak of lung diseases related to electronic atomization in the United States.
On November 22, the CDC advised people not to use electronic atomization products containing THC. Vitamin E acetate, a thickener used in some THC electronic cigarette products, is related to cases of lung injury.
On January 17, the CDC officially withdrew its recommendation that people not use e-cigarettes.
Judging from the current electronic atomization lung diseases, the number is decreasing, and the growth rate is also slowing down. The CDC believes that it may be caused by three reasons.
1. Due to the rapid response of public health, public awareness of the risks associated with the use of electronic cigarettes or electronic atomization products containing THC has increased.
2. Vitamin E acetate has been removed in some products.
3. Law enforcement actions related to certain illegal products.
The above is the main details of CDC's disclosure of electronic atomization mysterious lung disease. It can be seen that within 4 months, CDC is fast-tracking, and finally basically locked the vitamin E in THC as the culprit of lung disease.
The whole investigation was like a scrabble, and the truth surfaced bit by bit.
Wang Shibei set the Central Plains Day, and the family sacrifice never forgot to tell Nai Weng.
After all, there must be a clear and rigorous statement that concerns the employment of hundreds of thousands of people and the use of tens of millions of e-cigarette users, as well as thousands of cases of mysterious lung disease.
But in the past four months, some states in the United States and some countries in the world have issued many blindly following and rash bans on e-cigarettes.
Let's start with some states in the United States. Facing the outbreak of the epidemic, some states in the United States have taken some actions to resolve the outbreak.
The governor of Rhode Island signed an executive order instructing the state's health department to formulate emergency regulations to prohibit the sale of flavored e-cigarette products in the state.
The governor of Massachusetts called for a four-month temporary ban on the sale of all e-cigarettes and e-cigarette products in his state in response to the outbreak.
Michigan bans the sale of flavored e-cigarettes, while New York state bans most flavored e-cigarettes. San Francisco became the first city in the United States to effectively ban all e-cigarette sales in June.
However, now that the CDC's investigation is basically clear, it is not known whether the governors of these states will reflect on the emergency ban on e-cigarettes at that time and whether they will be withdrawn.
Two countries also performed very well during this period.
India announced a total ban on e-cigarettes in September. The production, manufacturing, import and export, transportation, sales, storage and advertising of e-cigarettes in India are all illegal.
The most powerful is the Philippines.
On November 20, Philippine President Duterte stated that the Philippines will ban e-cigarettes and will arrest anyone who smokes e-cigarettes.
Duterte said, I will ban e-cigarettes. Do you know why? Because e-cigarettes are poisonous, the government has the power to implement measures to protect the public health and public interest of the Philippines.
You know, the Philippines also said in 2018 that the government officially decided to make e-cigarettes a legal harm reduction product.
E-cigarettes were still your sweetie last year, and they will become Mrs. Niu this year.
Where are you going to make sense?
Of course, we also fully understand that the outside world has a lot of strangeness to this emerging e-cigarette industry, the industry is not long, and the market volume is still growing.
Electronic cigarettes and electronic atomization are a brand-new industry in themselves. Authoritative organizations including CDC need to spend time on research and uation. For more people who eat melons, it is necessary to accurately know and accurately describe and understand at the first time. It's also more difficult.
Even many Chinese media do not understand the e-cigarette industry, so that they have been reporting the US epidemic with the death of e-cigarettes.
Du Niang was shocking.
.jpg)
In fact, when the media translates vaping into e-cigarettes, it is already not rigorous.
Vaping is a very broad atomization behavior. The things that can be atomized include nicotine, CBD, and THC mentioned by CDC. Therefore, a more accurate translation is electronic atomization that is lethal.
We also found that some domestic media like to report the illegal operation of IQOS cartridges as illegal trading of electronic cigarettes. This makes e-cigarette practitioners want to cry, and also makes users who do not understand the industry feel confused. Isn't it illegal to smoke? Why are you still producing?
The conventional practice in the industry is that IQOS-type heat-not-burn products are called new tobacco, and Juul-type e-liquid atomization products are called electronic cigarettes.
We also hope that more media can report on the e-cigarette industry more accurately after in-depth understanding.
Now that the CDC has deleted the ban on the use of e-cigarettes, then, for other countries, states, and some news media that have thrown the pot to e-cigarettes, should you also learn from the CDC's standing upright?
CDC's self-renewal and self-repair capabilities are very strong. From the initial comprehensive prohibition suggestion to the frivolous investigation, the culprit is finally determined and then updated again, which makes e-cigarette practitioners very comfortable.
Although the New Deal for e-cigarettes in the U.S. prohibits changing most flavored products for e-cigarettes, and although the U.S. still has a PMTA policy that ends in May, seeing the CDC’s timely self-repair and Trump’s organization of various organizations to the White House to collectively Tobacco practitioners all believe that the industry will become more and more perfect, and will be more and more recognized in the supervision and misunderstanding.
Some American politicians are eager to stand in line to confuse e-vaporizing lung disease with juvenile addiction. The two-pronged ban on e-cigarettes may eventually lead to unemployment in the industry and repopulation of black market products.
At the same time, we also sincerely suggest that some media should amend e-cigarette deaths as e-cigarette deaths, and stop defining smuggling cartridges as e-cigarette smuggling, and stop throwing these pots to e-cigarettes.
The apology for owing e-cigarettes in this article only refers to the misunderstanding of the e-vaporization lung disease incident in the United States. Please do not expand your understanding.
In the end, you will find: the more you understand, the more awe.
.jpg)
Happy Chinese New Year to all e-cigarette operators and readers of Blue Hole