NIH: A study of high school students found that one in four teens reported
using e-cigarettes for “dripping,” a practice in which users produce
and inhale vapors by placing drops of e-liquids directly onto heated
atomizer coils. In a survey of 1,080 Connecticut high school students
who used e-cigarettes, 26.1 percent of students reported this behavior.
The survey found students engaged in dripping to produce thicker clouds
of vapor (63.5%), improve flavors (38.7%), and produce a stronger throat
hit (27.7%). The research was funded by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse and the FDA Center for Tobacco Products.
The authors emphasize that more research is needed about the
potential risks of this practice and recommend future safety studies be
conducted on the toxicities of hot vapors produced by this method of
exposing of e-liquids to high temperatures. The authors also encouraged
the development of prevention programs to educate youth about the
potential risks of these alternative e-cigarette use behaviors.
For a copy of the paper — “E-Cigarettes and “Dripping” Among High-School Youth”— published in Pediatrics, go to: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2017/02/02/peds.2016-3224
For information about e-cigarettes, go to: www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/electronic-cigarettes-e-cigarettes