The Food and Drug Administration is supposed to protect the public’s health and safety. So why is it trying to block the sale of an electronic alternative to cigarettes that can save people’s lives by simulating smoking without burning tobacco?
Electronic cigarettes, also known as e-cigarettes, are battery-powered devices that deliver nicotine in a vapor composed mainly of the food additive propylene glycol. There’s no question ... Jump to full article >>
Tobacco industry news | admin | February 18, 2010 |
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debate, E-Cigarettes, E-cigs, FDA, food additive, Food and Drug Administration, inhalers, Nicotine, nicotine gum, patches, propylene glycol, public health, risk, tobacco-specific nitrosamines
Electronic cigarettes have ignited international debate over their health effects, after New Zealand researchers ruled the battery-powered inventions were safe.
The cigarettes, known as e-cigarettes, are at the centre of a legal battle in the United States, with the Food and Drug Administration attempting to ban them from being imported into the country over safety concerns. Greek researchers have also called for more studies, saying in the Brit ... Jump to full article >>