We know that e-cigarettes can help some people quite smoking. But the fruity flavors and social media marketing are also the entryway to nicotine usage among many teens. Now, physicians say they’re treating a number of vape-related conditions ranging from head and stomach aches, to anxiety and depression. That rise in popularity recently prompted Surgeon General Jerome Adams to issue a rare advisory declaring e-cigarettes a youth epidemic.
So it’s not surprising that some pediatricians are recommending having kids tested — using home kits, or one of the labs that is now offering the service. Lauren Middlebrooks, an assistant professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta (@childrensatl), joins Here & Now‘s Robin Young to discuss the dangers of vaping and whether parents should test their kids.
This article was originally published on WBUR.org.
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