5150sick
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The problem here is ANTZ are pretending like the goal of vaping is to quit vaping and/or nicotine.
The goal of vaping is to cut back on tobacco cigarette intake or quit smoking entirely.
The goal of vaping is to enjoy nicotine without the cancer - 5150
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/e-cigarettes-dont-help-smokers-quit-study/
Peter Hajek, Director of the Tobacco Dependence Research Unit at Queen Mary University of London, called the study "grossly misleading."
"The studies that are presented as showing that vaping does not help people quit only recruited people who were currently smoking and asked them if they used e-cigarettes in the past. This means that people who used e-cigarettes and stopped smoking were excluded. The same approach would show that proven stop-smoking medications do not help or even undermine quitting," he said in a statement posted on the Science Media Centre's website.
Ann McNeill, Deputy Director of the UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies and a professor at King's College London, co-authored one of the studies in the analysis and called the review "not scientific." "The information included about two studies that I co-authored is either inaccurate or misleading," she said. "I am concerned at the huge damage this publication may have - many more smokers may continue smoking and die if they take from this piece of work that all evidence suggests e-cigarettes do not help you quit smoking; that is not the case."
The goal of vaping is to cut back on tobacco cigarette intake or quit smoking entirely.
The goal of vaping is to enjoy nicotine without the cancer - 5150
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/e-cigarettes-dont-help-smokers-quit-study/
Peter Hajek, Director of the Tobacco Dependence Research Unit at Queen Mary University of London, called the study "grossly misleading."
"The studies that are presented as showing that vaping does not help people quit only recruited people who were currently smoking and asked them if they used e-cigarettes in the past. This means that people who used e-cigarettes and stopped smoking were excluded. The same approach would show that proven stop-smoking medications do not help or even undermine quitting," he said in a statement posted on the Science Media Centre's website.
Ann McNeill, Deputy Director of the UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies and a professor at King's College London, co-authored one of the studies in the analysis and called the review "not scientific." "The information included about two studies that I co-authored is either inaccurate or misleading," she said. "I am concerned at the huge damage this publication may have - many more smokers may continue smoking and die if they take from this piece of work that all evidence suggests e-cigarettes do not help you quit smoking; that is not the case."