Electronic Cigarettes: Health Assessment
E-cigarettes are not safe or “good” for health. While marketed as a less harmful alternative to traditional cigarettes for adult smokers, they present significant health risks.
Established Risks and Concerns
- Toxic Exposure: E-cigarette aerosol is not harmless “water vapor.” It contains nicotine (highly addictive), ultrafine particles, flavoring chemicals (some linked to lung disease like diacetyl), volatile organic compounds, and heavy metals (e.g., nickel, tin, lead).
- Nicotine Addiction: E-cigarettes deliver nicotine effectively, sustaining addiction, which harms adolescent brain development and increases heart rate and blood pressure.
- Lung Injury (EVALI): In 2019-2020, a severe outbreak of E-cigarette or Vaping Product Use-Associated Lung Injury (EVALI) hospitalized thousands, primarily linked to vitamin E acetate in THC-containing products, though other additives also pose risks.
- Respiratory Issues: Use is associated with increased cough, wheezing, and asthma exacerbations. Long-term effects on lung health remain under investigation.
- Cardiovascular Risk: Evidence suggests e-cigarettes can impair blood vessel function and potentially increase the risk of cardiovascular disease over time.
- Youth Epidemic: Flavors, marketing, and discreet designs have fueled widespread use among youth, leading to nicotine addiction and acting as a potential gateway to combustible tobacco use.
- Unregulated Products: Market variability is significant. Illicit or poorly manufactured devices/liquids pose higher risks. Ingredient lists are often incomplete or inaccurate.
Relative Harm Compared to Smoking
Expert bodies like the UK Royal College of Physicians and the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine conclude that e-cigarettes are likely less harmful than continuing to smoke combustible cigarettes. This is primarily because they lack the high levels of tar and many carcinogens produced by burning tobacco. However, “less harmful” does not mean “safe.”

Expert Verdict
For Non-Smokers, Especially Youth: Avoid e-cigarettes entirely due to the clear risks of nicotine addiction and potential health harms.
For Current Adult Smokers: Evidence suggests switching completely to e-cigarettes could reduce exposure to harmful toxicants compared to continued smoking. However, they are not FDA-approved first-line cessation tools. Medically approved cessation methods (counseling, nicotine replacement therapy – patches/gum, prescription medications like varenicline or bupropion) remain the recommended approach due to proven efficacy and safety profiles. Smokers considering e-cigarettes solely to quit should discuss the risks and benefits with a healthcare provider.