So when I see advertisements that make me go hmmmmmmm... I tend to wonder why, how and wtf?
Just like it sounds, nicorette quickmist is a nicotine spray. Which is advertised to aid in smoking cessation. They can advertise that it helps you quit smoking.
Ingredients are
DESCRIPTION NICORETTE® QuickMist contains nicotine. 0.07 mL contains 1mg nicotine, corresponding to 1 mg nicotine/spray dose. NICORETTE® QuickMist in addition to the active contains: propylene glycol, anhydrous ethanol, trometamol, poloxamer 407, glycerol, sodium hydrogen carbonate, levomenthol, mint flavour, cooling flavour, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, hydrochloric acid and purified water. The mouth spray contains small amounts of ethanol (alcohol), less than 100mg per spray
notice the bold print? That works out to aprox 15 mg per ml. vs 3mg per ml I use in my RDA and RTA. There are quite a few puffs in 1 ml of ejuice. Anyway.. lets put that aside for now..
Ejuice ingredients
PG, VG, flavoring. and of course nicotine. and maybe a sweetener.
So we can compare this to 15mg per ml ejuice such as you would use in a vape pen or low power device that most of us started with.
What concerns me, is since the only active, medical ingredient in nicorette quick mist is exactly the same active medical ingredient as we have in vape juice....
with a whole lot of other junk mixed in to the quick mist, such as hydrocloric acid. (WHAT THE F????)
How does the FDA and Health Canada uphold nicorette to be a smoking cessation device and yet deny vape shops to even mention vaping as a means to quit smoking?
Just like it sounds, nicorette quickmist is a nicotine spray. Which is advertised to aid in smoking cessation. They can advertise that it helps you quit smoking.
Ingredients are
DESCRIPTION NICORETTE® QuickMist contains nicotine. 0.07 mL contains 1mg nicotine, corresponding to 1 mg nicotine/spray dose. NICORETTE® QuickMist in addition to the active contains: propylene glycol, anhydrous ethanol, trometamol, poloxamer 407, glycerol, sodium hydrogen carbonate, levomenthol, mint flavour, cooling flavour, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, hydrochloric acid and purified water. The mouth spray contains small amounts of ethanol (alcohol), less than 100mg per spray
notice the bold print? That works out to aprox 15 mg per ml. vs 3mg per ml I use in my RDA and RTA. There are quite a few puffs in 1 ml of ejuice. Anyway.. lets put that aside for now..
Ejuice ingredients
PG, VG, flavoring. and of course nicotine. and maybe a sweetener.
So we can compare this to 15mg per ml ejuice such as you would use in a vape pen or low power device that most of us started with.
What concerns me, is since the only active, medical ingredient in nicorette quick mist is exactly the same active medical ingredient as we have in vape juice....
with a whole lot of other junk mixed in to the quick mist, such as hydrocloric acid. (WHAT THE F????)
How does the FDA and Health Canada uphold nicorette to be a smoking cessation device and yet deny vape shops to even mention vaping as a means to quit smoking?