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SILICON
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief
Leo Simpson, B.Bus., FAICD
Production Manager
Greg Swain, B.Sc. (Hons.)
Technical Editor
John Clarke, B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Ross Tester
Jim Rowe, B.A., B.Sc
Nicholas Vinen
Photography
Ross Tester
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Phone (02) 9939 3295
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glyn<at>siliconchip.com.au
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Brendan Akhurst
Rodney Champness, VK3UG
Kevin Poulter
Stan Swan
Dave Thompson
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2 Silicon Chip
Publisher’s Letter
E-cigarettes – a new way for
smokers to poison themselves
If you’re not a smoker or seldom have to put up
with “second-hand smoke” from nicotine addicts,
you may not be aware of the recent development of
“e-cigarettes”. While the name suggests these are an
electronically controlled cigarette, the reality is somewhat more prosaic in that they essentially contain a
battery and a small heating element to vaporise a liquid
mixture containing nicotine. Their supposed advantage
is that they do not involve the inhaling of tars and the other noxious combustion products of a conventional tobacco cigarette.
Now the reason I am writing about them at all is that while they were only
introduced a few years ago, their worldwide sales are already into the hundreds
of millions a year, so much so that the big tobacco companies such as Philip
Morris are contemplating getting into the market themselves. If tobacco companies see them as a worthwhile product that’s a fair indication that they’re
not! I must say that I loathe anything to do with tobacco and smoking and I
cannot see any advantage in people smoking e-cigarettes instead.
I have already seen enough of them being used to conclude that cigarette
smokers who change over to e-cigarettes are clearly deluded into thinking that
they are better off. There is no medical evidence, so far, to suggest that there is
any benefit and they apparently offer no advantage in helping people to stop
smoking.
In fact, tobacco smokers may smoke e-cigarettes even more, in the mistaken
belief that they are not as harmful. Worse, while those same smokers may previously have gone outdoors to “have a fag” they often now smoke e-cigarettes
indoors. So people who used to be exposed to “second-hand smoke” are now
being exposed to second-hand “vapour”, as it is euphemistically called. “Second-hand poison” would be a better description. Make no mistake; nicotine is
a deadly poison; more deadly than arsenic or strychnine, in fact.
And while it is bad enough for adults to be exposed to second-hand vapour
(nicotine) from an e-cigarette, I have seen them smoked when children are
close by. These days that should be regarded as reprehensible behaviour. More
teenagers are smoking e-cigarettes and apparently already young people in the
USA are being taken to hospital with nicotine poisoning.
Public authorities in the USA and Europe are already recognising the hazards of e-cigarettes and they are being banned from public spaces. I hope that
happens soon in Australia.
Some people who smoke e-cigarettes clearly see themselves as trend setters.
I see them as severely deluded. After all, taking LSD was once regarded as
trendy by celebrities; most of them are now dead. Just because a new product
has the prefix “e” does not make it good or desirable. “email” may be good;
e-cigarettes are not.
I can see only one advantage for e-cigarettes and that is possibly for people
suffering from mental illness who frequently are heavy smokers. This is because, particularly in the case of those suffering from schizophrenia, cigarettes
can moderate the symptoms. For these unfortunate people, e-cigarettes may
be an advantage in reducing nicotine stains on their fingers, tooth discolouration and decay and so on. If that turns out to be valid, it is still a pretty poor
recommendation.
If you know someone who has taken up e-cigarettes, there are two things
you can do. First tell them that they are acting stupidly and if they persist,
give them a wide berth.
Leo Simpson
siliconchip.com.au
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