ISHN logo
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
ISHN logo
  • NEWS
    • Today's News
    • Global Safety News
    • Government Regulations
  • PRODUCTS
    • Product Innovations
    • Featured Products
  • TOPICS
    • Environmental Health and Safety
    • Facility Safety
    • Workplace Health
    • Occupational Safety
    • PPE
    • More Topics
  • CONSTRUCTION
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • COLUMNS
    • Best Practices
    • Dave Johnson: What’s going on
    • Editorial Comments
    • Leading Safety
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • ISHN Podcast
    • Videos
    • Cold Stress Education Quiz
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • MORE
    • Buyer's Guide
    • Newsletters
    • Convention Companion
    • Polls
    • Events
    • ISHN Store
    • Sponsor Insights
  • EMAGAZINE
    • eMagazine
    • Archived Issues
    • Contact
    • Advertise
  • JOIN TODAY!
Government Safety RegulationsWorkplace Health

A FairWarning story

FDA playing catch-up as JUUL and imitators give nicotine jolt to e-cig business

By Angus Chen
e-cigarettes
June 11, 2018

Posted with permission from Fairwarning.org:

Teenagers from local high schools flock to Brooklyn Vape in downtown Brooklyn. The store is small – a single room with vape paraphernalia stacked to the ceiling in glass cabinets. Many of the teens walk awkwardly through the shop and ask the clerk, a man who goes by Ali and wouldn’t give his last name, if they can buy an e-cigarette. Ali says most of them ask for a JUUL, a vaporizer fashioned into a sleek, rectangular prism that can vanish into a closed fist, but occasionally they’re looking for something a little different.

“Sometimes they ask for the Phix,” Ali said. “About once a week they ask for the Suorin Drop or Suorin Air.” Then, Ali says, when it comes time to buy, they say they left their IDs at home.

The federal government classifies e-cigarettes as tobacco products and, as such, youths under 18 (or under 21 in New York City) are barred from buying them. Of course, rules never stop all teenagers, and a teen vaping trend has gained serious steam over the last year. Most of the attention revolves around the JUUL device, whose starter kit normally sells for about $50, but new offerings with similar features have rapidly entered the market.

“We’ve already begun to see a whole new generation of e-cigarettes, all of which are designed to deliver far higher levels of nicotine in far more sleek containers than have existed in the past,” said Matthew Myers, the president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “Whether intentionally or by mistake,” he later added, “the original creators of JUUL produced the perfect next-fad product for our nation’s kids.”For public health authorities, the popularity of JUUL and its rivals highlights the conundrum of e-cigarettes. They provide a safer way for smokers to get their nicotine fix by delivering far less of the toxic and cancer-causing baggage of conventional cigarettes. But will e-cigarettes ultimately lead to less tobacco smoking or more? Critics fear, and some studies suggest, that many kids who would never experiment with regular cigarettes will try e-cigarettes, become addicted, and graduate to tobacco as a more satisfying way to get nicotine. “If you could get every smoker to switch to vaping, that would be a huge public health victory,” said Meghan Morean, a psychologist at Oberlin College who studies substance abuse among teens. “But sometimes great ideas have really negative unintended consequences.”

The concerns are being heightened by the massive numbers of adolescents taking up vaping – at a point in their lives when heavy nicotine consumption can affect brain development. The University of Michigan’s most recent national survey of drug use by adolescents found that, in 2017, 19 percent of high school seniors reported nicotine vaping in the previous 12 months. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today released data showing that 11.7 percent of high school students last year reporting using e-cigarettes in the previous 30 days, up from 1.5 percent in 2011. ​

A lack of regulation has eased the way for the boom in e-cigarette sales. Last summer, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration came under fierce attack from public health advocates for granting e-cigarette makers a long delay in seeking approval for new products. Under the moratorium announced by the agency, the companies will have until 2022 to submit information on their manufacturing and marketing practices. But now, amid growing alarm about teens taking up the vaping habit, the FDA has started to take some action.

In April, the FDA announced an undercover operation cracking down on retailers that sell JUUL products to minors. The agency also demanded that JUUL Labs, the San Francisco-based company that markets the JUUL device, turn over documents related to its marketing practices and research, including information on the health effects of its products.“We don’t yet fully understand why these products are so popular among youth. But it’s imperative that we figure it out, and fast. These documents may help us get there,” FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in a written statement. In May, the FDA demanded similar records from other e-cigarette manufacturers, including J Well, YGT Investment, 7 Daze, Liquid Filling Solutions and SVR.

JUUL officials declined to answer a question from FairWarning about whether they felt any qualms about their device’s powerful appeal to youth. But they pointed to a company statement that their “mission is to eliminate cigarettes and help the more than one billion smokers worldwide switch to a better alternative… At the same time, we are committed to deterring young people, as well as adults who do not currently smoke, from using our products. We cannot be more emphatic on this point: No young person or non-nicotine user should ever try JUUL.”

JUUL Labs has set up a $30 million fund to investigate and prevent underage nicotine use, and reached out to Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller to set up an advisory group that would influence JUUL’s future policies and designs. That group would have no real power over JUUL, though, and what the company does won’t affect the policies of the vape industry as a whole.

JUUL fired up the e-cigarette business. The original e-cigarettes came in two basic styles. One was a long, slim cylinder with a LED light that lit up on draws – making it look like a tobacco cigarette – and the other was a large, handheld battery with an atomizer screwed on top that hissed and turned users into fog machines.

Adam Bowen and James Monsees, JUUL’s designers and the founders of the business that became JUUL Labs, intended their e-cigarette to be different. They wanted it to be the cigarette-killer, JUUL spokeswoman Victoria Davis said via e-mail. For that, it had to be sexier than cigarettes. The design featured a gem-shaped cartridge window separating the JUUL’s gunmetal gray battery from a black mouthpiece. There are no buttons – sucking on the mouthpiece activates the device. And JUUL comes with disposable pods, which each last about 200 puffs and are filled with 50 milligrams of nicotine – about the same as a pack of cigarettes. The whole thing is shorter than the palm of your hand and resembles a long, slim USB memory drive.

It was important that the JUUL didn’t look like older e-cigarettes or tobacco cigarettes. “We know adult smokers who want to switch [to e-cigarettes] do not want to be reminded of combustible cigarettes,” Davis said. Likewise, teenagers often are turned off by traditional cigarettes. “They don’t want to be considered smokers,” said Oberlin College’s Morean.

The new approach clicked. Upon its introduction three years ago, JUUL was greeted with a review in Wiredmagazine headlined, “This Might Just Be the First Great E-Cig.” Meanwhile, with JUUL the dominant company, the e-cigarette industry’s revenues have boomed. According to a recent Wells Fargo analysis, overall sales for the vape industry in the U.S. this year will grow about 25 percent to reach $5.5 billion.

Milan, a Brooklyn high school student whose last name is being withheld to protect her privacy, offers an explanation for JUUL’s popularity. “It’s about style,” she said. “Because the design is so cool, it lures people in.” Plus, Milan added, “Because it’s small, you can get away with” using it in school.

Other manufacturers have followed JUUL’s lead in coming out with their own thin, sleek devices with interchangeable, prefilled pods. Ramakanth Kavuluru, a data scientist at the University of Kentucky who has tracked e-cigarette use on social media, likens the trend to what happened in the smartphone business. JUUL, he says, was the iPhone of e-cigarettes. The others are like Androids – emulating the industry leader but offering a wider range of flavors and nicotine concentrations.

A new vape, the Suorin Drop, seems to be emerging as a top rival to JUUL among youths. Video reviews have come out on YouTube with titles like “Suorin Drop (THE JUUL KILLER)” and “Suorin Drop, Better than the JUUL?” In one video, a young man holds up a JUUL and says, “I’ve had this JUUL for many months but it hasn’t been getting me that buzz lately, you know?” Then he holds up a Suorin Drop. It’s a flat device that, like the JUUL, can fit in the palm of a hand, but is shorter, wider and molded into the shape of a teardrop.

Perhaps the biggest selling point is the fact that Suorin pods are refillable. Vapers can buy liquids that have even higher concentrations of nicotine, and more flavors, than the JUUL. It’s cheaper, too. A four-pack of JUUL pods costs about $17, while a bottle of vape juice that would refill a Suorin several times can go for $15 or less.

Because the Suorin is shorter than the JUUL, surreptitious vaping is easier. Matt, a 15-year-old Suorin user from San Jose, California, says teachers at his school are catching onto the JUUL and other vapes that look like it. But, he said, “They don’t know what the Suorin looks like,” making it easier to sneak at schools.

The Suorin Drop so far doesn’t seem to have caught the FDA’s attention, either. The company that makes it, Shenzhen Bluemark Technology Co, wasn’t among the e-cigarette firms ordered this spring to provide information to the agency about its youth business.

In response to a question from FairWarning about whether the company was concerned about selling a product widely used by underage consumers and exposing them to the risk of nicotine addiction, Shenzhen Bluemark replied, “Our product is intended for use by adult smokers of legal age who want to get rid of cigarette[s].” The company said it has taken measures to ensure its product isn’t sold to minors.

Meanwhile, adolescents who are heavy users of e-cigarettes risk becoming addicted to the nicotine. “I don’t feel like I need it like some of my friends who are at the point like, ‘Oh my God, I’m so addicted. I need it,’’’ Matt said.

“I’m just like whatever,” he said. “ I just use it a couple times.” A couple times a day? After a moment, Matt replied, “A couple times every hour maybe. But my friends use it every five minutes.”

About FairWarning

This story was reported by FairWarning (www.fairwarning.org), a nonprofit news organization based in Pasadena, Calif., that focuses on public health, safety and environmental issues.

KEYWORDS: tobacco

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Angus Chen writes for FairWarning, a nonprofit (501(c)(3)) investigative news organization that focuses on public health, consumer and environmental issues and related topics of government and business accountability.

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • forklift safety

    Exploring the latest technologies in forklift safety

    With more staff and more stock in warehousing now more...
    Workplace Training Strategies
    By: Josh Cramer
  • welding

    All about welder’s flash or arc eye

    A flash burn is a painful inflammation of the cornea,...
    Environmental Health and Safety
  • dangerous jobs

    The 10 most dangerous jobs in the U.S.

    On-the-job deaths have been rising — hitting the highest...
    Government Safety Regulations
    By: Benita Mehta
Manage My Account
  • eMagazine Subscriptions
  • ISHN Newsletter & Other Newsletter Alerts
  • Online Registration
  • Manage My Preferences
  • Subscription Customer Service

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the ISHN audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of ISHN or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • man wearing the the Sundström SR200 Full Face Mask Respirator
    Sponsored byOHD

    5 Fit Testing Mistakes That Could Cost You

  • This image shows Magid AcuSpex polarized blue mirrored safety glasses.
    Sponsored byMagid Glove and Safety

    Construction PPE Guide: What Crews Need for Each Task

  • lone worker in confined space
    Sponsored byAlphasense Ltd.

    GET THE LEAD OUT of your Safety Oxygen Sensors!

Popular Stories

SpaceX 7 launch

OSHA Investigating Fatal Fall at SpaceX Starbase

dust explosion

Tennessee OSHA Issues Record $3.1M Fine After Deadly Explosion at Munitions Plant

roofing dangerous jobs Getty.jpg

OSHA Finds Florida Roofing Company Willfully Exposed Workers to Safety Hazards After Worker’s Fatal Fall

top 10 most dangerous jobs

Poll

Seasonal Readiness

With the federal heat stress prevention rule on the horizon, which area of your safety program needs the most attention?
View Results Poll Archive

Products

Surviving an OSHA Audit A Management Guide, 2nd Edition

Surviving an OSHA Audit A Management Guide, 2nd Edition

See More Products

ISHN Podcasts

Related Articles

  • Manufacturing plant

    A FairWarning report: Under attack for its response to the coronavirus pandemic, OSHA is playing catch-up

    See More
  • Fraser Shipyards: Playing “catch-up” kills workers

    See More
  • Health experts want FDA crackdown on Juul e-cigarettes

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • A Basic Guide to RCRA—Understanding Solid and Hazardous Waste Management, Second Edition

  • 0470387408.jpg

    Preparing for OSHA s Voluntary Protection Programs: A Guide to Success

See More Products

Related Directories

  • e-Hazard

    E-Hazard is dedicated to building an electrical safety culture with you. Our electrical engineering services and training will prepare your team for any electrical safety needs or concerns. E-Hazard can help with electrical training, arc flash studies, electrical audits, electrical safety programs, LOTO, infrared scanning, NFPA 70B, consulting and much more.
×

Become a Leader in Safety Culture

Build your knowledge with ISHN, covering key safety, health and industrial hygiene news, products, and trends.

JOIN TODAY
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Manufacturing Division
    • Store
    • Want More
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletters
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing