The evidence is in. For the first time, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized the marketing of an e-cigarette in the country because it determined the help it offers adult smokers outweighs the attraction such products may hold for youth.
The decision to allow the sale of British American Tobacco’s Vuse Solo closed electronic nicotine-delivery system, along with three tobacco-flavored cartridges, marks the third time in less than two years that the agency, despite vociferous, emotion-driven opposition from politicians and interest groups, has used peer-reviewed scientific evidence to approve tobacco harm reduction (THR) products.
With this latest move, the FDA has signaled a distinct turn in the oft-contentious debate surrounding e-cigarettes, in which opponents claim little is known about what toxic chemicals they contain and that the tobacco industry has a terrible track record when it comes to being forthcoming about its products.
Derek Yach – Tobacco Reporter – 2021-10-14.