E-cigarettes and vaping are transforming tobacco use in the United States and worldwide. These innovative products are being used almost exclusively by smokers looking for substitutes for more harmful conventional combustible tobacco. This revolution is progressing despite widespread opposition from public-health officials and tobacco prohibitionists, some of whom are combating the products with linguistics. They’re trying to label e-cigs “electronic nicotine delivery systems,” or ENDS.

Carl Phillips traced the beginning of the ENDS terminology to a 2010 World Health Organization report. To be fair, it’s common for researchers to invent terminology and acronyms as shorthand to communicate efficiently; Dr. Philip Cole and I used “ANDS” – alternative nicotine delivery systems – in a 1999 professional article describing safer nicotine substitutes for smokers.

Still, obfuscating popular terms as a form of social engineering is not appropriate, as two recent publications in Tobacco Regulatory Science  and Nicotine & Tobacco Research demonstrate.

In the first study, staff at RTI International and the Food and Drug Administration in 2014 interviewed 12 focus groups of vapers. They found that “participants understood the umbrella term ‘e-cigarettes’ to refer to a variety of device types”; that “vaper” was an acceptable term among e-cigarette users; and that “‘vapor’ was generally well-known overall.”  More importantly, they wrote that “conceptual clarity, including using specific and familiar terminology and descriptions of products for users and nonusers alike, is crucial,” but they concluded that ENDS did not meet that standard.

The second study, by researchers at the American Legacy Foundation and several universities, was more critical of ENDS. Examining the public posts of 1,023 users of a Legacy quit-smoking website, they found “that ‘e-cigarette’ and ‘vape’ are recognizable terms among US treatment-seeking smokers. Conversely, terms such as ‘ENDS,’ commonly employed by researchers and public health advocates, are not used by smokers and may be an impediment to tobacco control research.”

FDA and tobacco prohibitionists: when you talk to smokers and vapers, use the right terms. End the ENDS.

NOTE: This isn’t the first time anti-tobacco forces have attempted to abuse linguistics in order to change behavior. In 2010, I advised the American Cancer Society and federal agencies that their use of the term “spit tobacco” instead of “smokeless tobacco” was disrespectful, unprofessional and pejorative. All agreed to discontinue the practice.


Photo by  kenary820 / Shutterstock.com

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