Article de Périodique
Electronic cigarettes: A policy statement from the American Heart Association (2014)
Auteur(s) :
A. BHATNAGAR ;
L. P. WHITSEL ;
K. M. RIBISL ;
C. BULLEN ;
F. CHALOUPKA ;
M. PIANO ;
R. M. ROBERTSON ;
T. McAULEY ;
D. GOFF ;
N. L. BENOWITZ
Article en page(s) :
1418-1436
Sous-type de document :
Revue de la littérature / Literature review
Refs biblio. :
139
Domaine :
Tabac / Tobacco / e-cigarette
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus mots-clés
E-CIGARETTE
;
POLITIQUE
;
SANTE PUBLIQUE
;
ANALYSE CHIMIQUE
;
NICOTINE
;
TOXICOLOGIE
;
REGLEMENTATION
;
PREVENTION
;
RECOMMANDATION
;
SEVRAGE
Thésaurus géographique
ETATS-UNIS
Résumé :
For decades, advocacy for tobacco control has been a priority of the American Heart Association (AHA). In partnership with major public health organizations, the association has made major strides in tobacco use prevention and cessation by prioritizing evidence-based strategies such as increasing excise taxes; passing comprehensive smoke-free air laws; facilitating US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authority to regulate tobacco, including comprehensive tobacco cessation treatment within healthcare plans; and supporting adequate funding of comprehensive tobacco control programs in different states. These tobacco control efforts have cut in half the youth smoking rate from 1997 to 2007 and have saved >8 million lives in the past 50 years. However, the work is far from done and has stalled, especially for people living below the poverty line, those with mental illnesses, and those with low educational attainment. Unless current trends reverse, ≈5.6 million children alive today in the United States will die prematurely of smoking-related diseases. Even now, cigarette smoking kills nearly half a million Americans each year, and an additional 16 million individuals suffer from smoking-related illness, which costs the United States $289 billion dollars annually in direct medical care and other economic costs.
This statement reviews the latest science concerning one of the newest classes of products to enter the tobacco product landscape - electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), also called electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) - and provides an overview on design, operations, constituents, toxicology, safety, user profiles, public health, youth access, impact as a cessation aid, and secondhand exposure.
This statement reviews the latest science concerning one of the newest classes of products to enter the tobacco product landscape - electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), also called electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) - and provides an overview on design, operations, constituents, toxicology, safety, user profiles, public health, youth access, impact as a cessation aid, and secondhand exposure.
Affiliation :
American Heart Association Advocacy Coordinating Committee, Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing, Council on Clinical Cardiology, and Council on Quality of Care and Outcomes Research, USA