Daily Archives: May 18, 2023

Vaping: It’s Not What You Think | National Institute of Justice – National Institute of Justice

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:53 am

SPEAKER 1: Welcome to Justice Today, the official podcast of the Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs, where we shine a light on cutting edge research and practices and offer an in-depth look at what we're doing to meet the biggest public safety challenges of our time. Join us as we explore how funded science and technology help us achieve strong communities.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: Hello and welcome to Justice Today. We are talking about vaping today because it's not what you think. My name is Frances Scott. I'm a Program Manager in the Office of Investigative and Forensic Sciences here at the National Institute of Justice. And I'm joined today by Dr. Michelle Peace. Dr. Peace is a tenured Associate Professor in the Department of Forensic Science at Virginia Commonwealth University, and she is a founding faculty member of that department. Dr. Peace, welcome.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Well, hello, Dr. Scott. Thank you for having me today.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So, you were one of the first to begin researching e-cigarettes and vaping since their rise to popularity in the U.S. What prompted your interest in this research topic?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Thank you for that question, because it's really a story of developing relationships with undergraduate students, and I love telling this story. So, electronic cigarettes, you know, they have a long history in the United States actually, but the modern electronic cigarette really didn't hit the United States until roughly 2006. And so the devices were really niche products. And so they weren't really widespread like we think about them today. And so before they came to the United States, they actually made their rounds around the rest of the world. And so they were really popular in other marketplaces. The Europe--European marketplace, you know, is, you know, where they really caught on before they caught on here in the States.

And so I had an undergraduate student who was studying abroad as part of her bachelor's degree. And she comes home, and we have an advising meeting, and she has been studying in Europe, and she comes into my office and she's super excited and she says, "Dr. Peace, we really think you need to study these things called electronic cigarettes." And I had no idea what she was talking about. And so, right, while shes chatting, Im Googling, and shes talking about how pervasive they are. Everybody is vaping and its fun and it's cool. And so, you know, I was really frank with her, and I said, "Well, why do I care, right? As a forensic toxicologist, why do I care about how people consume nicotine? We had a conversation about that and, you know, and I just rested in it. This was probably 2011, 2012. And, you know, I'm a little bit of a slow thinker. And so one day it just dawned on me, oh my heavens, people are going to be able to manipulate the devices, and if they can manipulate the device, then they're going to put whatever drug they want into them.

So we actually started trying to collect some preliminary data and recognize that, yes indeed that was going to be true. I reached out to a number of colleagues who work in crime labs and just to say, "Hey, are you guys testing these things called e-cigarettes?" And for the most part, nobody was, except for one lab that said, "Yeah, we're--we are collecting them over in a shoebox." I said, "Do you mind running some of those for me to see if there's anything of interest in them?" And so he did, and there it was. So that's how--that was all preliminary data that we put into our first grant to the National Institute of Justice.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: And we are at the--at the NIJ are very happy for that conversation and--and proud to have funded you through the years and to have been, you know, with you on the forefront of this research.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: I appreciate you--I appreciate you seeing this when, you know, we felt as though it was--it didn't have a snowball's chance, right? On a hot day, so we appreciate that the NIJ really took that risk.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So, before we dig into the--our discussion on your research, can you explain vaping to our audience? I think we all think we understand it, but I think there are some misconceptions that you could clear up for us. How does it compare to traditional smoking?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah, I think--I appreciate starting with that conversation. There's--because I do--I think you're right, there's some misconceptions and frankly some mythologies that have been promoted about what vaping is. And so I'll start talking about the traditional cigarette, because when you think about a traditional cigarette and that you are lighting that, it's combustible, there's, you know, it--there's fire. And so that you--you're still generating something that's called an aerosol. And we think about that in terms of its smoke, but it's really an aerosol. And aerosols are made up of millions of tiny droplets, and those droplets have different sizes. Well, the same thing happens with an e-cigarette.

Um, so vaping uses a device called an electronic cigarette that is made up of a number of important components that no matter what that e-cigarette looks like, all of the components exist. So the most significant component is called the coil. And that coil is typically metal, and it heats up to roughly, depending on the settings, 250-1,000 degrees Celsius, so it gets so, so hot. And that coil is in touch with what we refer to as the e-liquid. There are some industries that call them e-cigarette formulations. We just refer to them as e-liquids. And that e-liquid is made up of chemicals, and they're made up of common chemicals that are called propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin. They're commonly known as PG and VG. And in the PG and VG are other chemicals. So, of course, our pharmacological agent, you know, in most instances as nicotine, but also lots of flavoring compounds and solvents are also in that e-liquid.

So when that coil gets really hot, it immediately vaporizes that e-liquid. When it hits the air, it pulls water out of the air, and in that process, millions of tiny droplets are formed. So, the mythology is that, well, vaping is just, you know, water vapor and that's mythology, that's an incorrect assumption, that's a misconception. Yes, it's pulling water out of the air, but the--that aerosol cloud still has all of those chemical components that was in the original e-liquid plus other chemicals that are formed when those chemicals hit that heat and they degrade. So there's a--there can be a complicated chemical profile inside of that aerosol cloud as well, that the consumer is inhaling.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: And that someone walking behind them inhaling their cloud is also inhaling now, you know, without intending to, right?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. You know, there's some interesting and good research happening right now, not in my lab, but, you know, with other investigators, in which they're evaluating the nature of that secondary--what we refer to as secondary smoke, right? It's not smoke, it's an aerosol cloud. And so secondary exposure is important to appreciate and to understand. I think what's also interesting is that there is some good research happening with tertiary exposure, meaning that when that aerosol cloud lands on objects, furniture, clothing, right, there's a tackiness associated with it; that's because PG and VG are sticky. And so, right, so there's definitely some concern that people who have a tertiary exposure are also getting exposed to whatever that pharmacological agent is. And, you know, there are certain bodies, certain people who are really concerned about children being exposed to nicotine through a tertiary exposure, right? Because even nicotine is toxic.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: That's fascinating. Thank you for that explanation. So most of your research has involved, as you said, those other interesting things, drugs, other than nicotines, in that e-liquid. Can you--I know there's a lot, can you summarize just some of your findings and, kind of, that research path?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. So, one of the things that we didn't fully appreciate when we started was that there wasn't a lot of research, there wasn't a lot of data, as to how the devices work and how effective are they, and certainly, there wasn't any data that really compared the devices head to head. So I don't want to say there was none, you know, there's been aerosol research at institutions for decades. And some of the most important aerosol research is--some of it's here at VCU, some of it's University of Maryland, some of the most important aerosol research. So it wasn't like we didn't know anything, but this thing that's called an electronic cigarette felt new. So we had to collect a lot of data just to figure out how did the devices work so that we can then figure out how to manipulate them.

So one of the--one of the studies that we first started, right, because you got to figure out also, well, how do I test what--how do you test an e-liquid? Like what is that going to look like in the instrument? So we just started buying a bunch of e-liquid products and we started noticing that what was on the label was not what we found in the bottle. And so, that became--it was at first interesting, and I thought, Is this widespread? So we started getting e-liquids in from friends all over the nation and--that--my question was: they need to be made in the United States. So it looked like we were the first ones that really published on this is what's in the U.S. marketplace. And at the time, the e-cigarette industry was unregulated, and so when you have an unregulated industry there's always issues around is the industry going to adhere to certain quality assurance standards?

So we really demonstrated that in the early days that there was--what was on the bottle--what was--what was in the bottle was not how it was labeled. We've demonstrated that there's thousands of potential flavoring compounds and those flavoring compounds are in solvents, and those solvents are sometimes in the final products that the consumers are using. So we found an industrial solvent called GBL in some products. We have--we've certainly kept an eye on drug user forums to see how they're talking about how they use the devices to vape other substances and what they do to get those other substances into their e-liquids. How do they manipulate the drug to get it into the e-cigarette and the e-liquid? And then, you know, one of the things that we--right, I mean, this is the great thing about research is that you don't--you don't know what to anticipate next until you're down a path, is we discovered that some of--some of the e-liquids that we had in-house had ethanol in them. And so, you know, we were like, "Why is there ethanol in e-liquids?" And so, you know, we did a--we did a survey of products and found that there were some products that had a substantial amount of ethanol in those e-liquids. And at the time, our lab found many products that were as much as 20% ethanol, and since then, we have found some e-liquids that have as much as 30% ethanol in them. So, you know, in terms of drugs, you know, we have certainly, you know, collaborated on cases with and seen instances in which and also, you know, found e-liquids that have methamphetamine in them and synthetic cannabinoids and opioids, as well, in the e-liquids.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: There's a lot to unpack there, but I want to pull on a couple of those threads. What about the coil itself? You mentioned that it heats up to incredibly hot temperatures.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Uh-hmm.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: What did you find about what that does to the actual coil and the aerosol?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Because of how we got funded, right? National Institute of Justice and thinking about, you know, death investigations and toxicology and, you know, it was--the question that I had was, "Well, if I need--if somebody needs to say the overdose happened because they inhaled this product from an e-cigarette," I wondered, "Well, how do we--how do we pin that?" So, I was thinking about the fact that, you know, the--that e-liquid is in contact with a lot of metal in the device. And so we found that actually e-liquids themselves have trace metals in them, which wasn't all that surprising. But what I really thought about the source of the metal was the coil.

And so, right, so coils are made up of--there's--at the time we did the research, there was two predominant metal compositions. And so we took a look at both of them to find out, one, what is the metal content of this, and what happens when it gets heated just in normal heat cycles? And so, you know, what I thought about was, "Well, can I--if there's enough metal coming off of that coil, is that metal going to be like a residue in somebody's mouth or their upper respiratory tract, you know, if there's enough?" So, I was interested in, are the coils flaking?

So, we ran a bunch of studies where we heated the coils in a standard fashion and then we've ran them through a number of heat cycles up to 150. And at certain points, we stopped and looked at the--looked at the coils under scanning electron microscope and under a regular stereo microscope. And we demonstrated that the coils are flaking significantly even after--even after 50 heat cycles. So, you can literally see the surface of the metal bubbling up and off. So, then the next question was, well, this probably--because it's heavy, right? We thought, "Well, it's probably condensing on the inside of the mouthpiece." And we swabbed the insides and mouthpieces, no metal. And so we're like, "Okay." So, we ran the aerosols through a filter to capture, you know, was there going to be metal on that filter from the aerosol, and sure enough, that's where the metal was.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So, e-cigarette users are actually breathing in aerosolized metal particles into their lungs?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yes.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: Wow. Not just water vapor?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Not just water vapor.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So, you talked about all of these millions of droplets and them being a variety of sizes. What does that mean for the absorption, the intake from a forensic toxicology point of view? Is this--is this a good transport mechanism from the point of view of getting into the lung tissue?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: So, what happens when there's a condensation aerosol form, right, and when you inhale all of those millions of droplets--and this is where there's lots of rich data--is that the bigger droplets are going to get trapped in the mouth and hit the back of the throat. So, you think about when you're inhaling--you know, you're inhaling this cloud into your mouth, and then it has to essentially take a 90-degree turn to get into your respiratory system, into your lungs. And so bigger droplets are just big, right? They can't--we kind of intuitively know that it takes big things longer turns to make a turn. And so because your mouth is so small, your throat is so small, big droplets just impact in the mouth and impact in the back of the throat and they never make it into the lung tissue. And so some of the studies that we did, because we were interested in if you change the voltage, if you change the chemical composition of your e-liquid, do the size of the droplets change?

So, what happens is that the small droplets are small enough to make that 90-degree turn into your lung tissue. And the very small droplets will make it into the very deep lung tissue where there is interaction with the blood system, right? And that's where you get oxygen and carbon dioxide exchanged. But that's also where drugs cross into the blood system. So, inhaling substance--inhaling substances is a really efficient way to consume drugs to get into the blood system fast and to have an effect fast. So, we demonstrated that there were some parameters that really didn't change the composition of the droplet sizes and some moderately changed the composition of the droplet sizes. But still, no matter what the parameters were, whether it was the recipe of the e-liquid, or the voltage of the device, you're still going to get sufficient particles, sufficient droplets into the deep lung tissue where there's going to be an exchange into the blood supply. So, at the end of the day, the e-cigarette technology is a very effective tool to getting drugs into the blood supply and into the body for an effect.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: And very quickly as opposed to...

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Very quickly.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: ...taking things orally or other, you know, methods?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah, yeah, very quickly.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So, you mentioned that the e-cigarette market was not regulated at the time that you began your research. Is it now regulated? Are there limitations to those regulations?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. So, you know, when the electronic cigarettes began to be imported in '06, '07, you know, the FDA did think that they have regulatory control over them. The FDA had done a lot of work in the '80s and the early '90s to regulate the tobacco industry. And so the regulatory language said that they regulate tobacco and tobacco products. And when the e-cigarettes started being imported into the States, the companies that were importing them essentially told the FDA, "You do not have regulatory oversight over the electronic cigarette because these are not tobacco products. They are nicotine delivery devices." And so the FDA then had to, you know, essentially spend a lot of time developing and redeveloping regulatory language and--you know. And that requires--that requires, you know, Congress and the President's office to give them some direction and authority to do that. So, that all takes time. And then once you have the green light to do that, then you have to develop that language, and building that consensus language, takes time. So, it was almost a decade before the FDA was really able to promulgate the regulations for the electronic cigarette.

And so, you know, is it--is it what I think is robust and thorough? You know, I think there's room for improvement. I think that there--I think there needs to be a real consideration over what kind of chemicals can be put into an e-liquid. So, some of the really early language in the unregulated industry was that, "Well, we're using chemicals that are generally regarded as safe by the FDA." So, they're not harmful. And so that was some of the other mythology that existed, you know, to--for the general public to think that they were safe products. And the term generally regarded as safe means that a chemical is safe to eat. And what consumers didn't appreciate was that these chemicals that are being used in e-liquids are not generally regarded as safe to inhale. Many or most of the chemicals that are used in e-liquids are known toxins, irritants, carcinogens in lung tissue. There is good research that is emerging right now that is demonstrating how chemicals that are used in e-liquids are suppressing the immune system and the lung tissue and propagating lung diseases.

And so when we think about that marketplace being unregulated for a long time, it gave a lot of bandwidth for--essentially for that industry to--you know, I'm just going to say it, get its hooks into the consumers. And then reversing that is hard. So, I think that the regulations really need to put more pins in. You can't put industrial solvents into e-liquids. You--and have a list of chemicals that are forbidden agents in an e-liquid. And, you know--you know, companies have to put in applications to be approved to market their products now and sell to the consumers. And I don't know that that's--that that has all gone far enough. You know, we--we're still not seeing labels on the packages in terms of what the chemicals are in those e-liquids. I think consumers, you know, if you choose to consume nicotine, I think they need to know what's in those e-liquids so that they can make informed decisions about what they're consuming.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: Absolutely. You mentioned lung disease associated with e-cigarette use. In 2019, there was a rash of mostly young, apparently, healthy people hospitalized with e-cigarette or vaping use associated lung injury, which is long so we say EVALI. What causes EVALI and why is it associated with vaping and not with traditional smoking?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: So EVALI. When young people started really reporting with significant lung injury--and in several patients, many patients died from these lung injuries. And when you go back and you evaluate the population of people who were officially diagnosed as having EVALI and--you know. And you do those studies to find out, "Well, what's the--what's the origin, right?" Like, with any kind of disease state that's progressing through a population, What's the origin? We have recent experience with that, right? So what they found was that many of those patients had been vaping gray-market cannabis products. And that in some of those gray-market cannabis products, there was a compound called vitamin E or vitamin E acetate. And, you know, they were able to collect fluid from the lungs of some of those patients and demonstrated that there was vitamin E acetate in the lung tissue of some of those patients. And so, now, we have a chemical that is common to a lot of those patients. But I will say that that wasn't the only compound, right? There were lots of patients that, A, didn't get their lung fluid tested, and, B, actually never said that they vaped a gray-market THC product, or vaped a THC product at all. There were patients that were diagnosed with EVALI and significant EVALI that only vaped nicotine products.

I consulted on a--on a case in which a young man had been having some kind of lung injury on and off for years. And it was always attributed to--he was just prone to the flu. And so what the--when they actually figured out the pattern that he would get the flu right around the time that he was vaping a lot. So he had a lot of lung congestion, fevers, and because he was having lung congestion and not feeling well, he'd stopped vaping. So then he would get better. And then when he was better, then he started vaping again, right? So he was on about a four-month cycle of this. And so--and that young man was never vaping a THC product. He was vaping a nicotine product.

And so I think we can't lose sight of the fact that chemicals, when you inhale them, are going to create injury to tender lung tissue. And that injury is going to cause the body to mount an immune response, right? It's going to send fluid to that response. You're going to get more cells in the--in the lung tissue to try to repair that chemical injury. So generally speaking, that lung tissue is being bombarded by lots of chemicals when you vape. Not the least of which is just PG and VG.

And so, you know, what we understand about PG and VG is that they're what we call hygroscopic, meaning they attract water. So, you know, we--and I'll be--I'll be honest, in the really early days. We were just--we had started the research. We would just get--when we--in our studies, we weigh the e-liquid before and after every time we use it in a device, and so we had just set bottles of e-liquid; left them out on the lab bench. And the student would come in the next day, and they would be heavier. And I'm like, "Whoa, well, we have to make new e-liquid because I don't know why that got--that gained weight overnight." So it gained weight because it was--it was absorbing water out of the atmosphere. So then we had this, you know, then we had to buy an environmental chamber and, you know, with desiccator in it, right?

So, what happens when you inhale--when you inhale PG and VG is that it is drawing water out of your lungs. And youre know, like there's water in your lungs? Yes, there's water in your lung tissue. There's a very thin coat of water in your deep lung tissue that facilitates oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange, very thin layer of water. And so when you inhale PG and VG it's going to absorb that water. So your deep lung tissue is going to dry out. When it dries out that creates injury. So we think that, you know, we can look at PG and VG as chemicals that are going to cause lung injury in addition to all of the other chemicals that are in e-liquids as well.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: And I think that underscores your previous point about generally regarded as safe. The difference between something like vitamin E, that I assume is safe to take as a vitamin, but not to inhale, and probably the same for vegetable glycerin.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. PG and VG is in, you know, those products are--those compounds are on everyday products that we eat from, you know, toothpaste to cheese.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: We just don't breathe them unless we're vaping.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Right.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: So you talked about the ethanol that you found. That was kind of a shocking discovery and in high concentrations. And so I know that led to your recent NIJ-funded research that includes a clinical study to determine the impact of vaping ethanol, both on actual intoxication and as related to, for example, preliminary breath test, like, might be done in the case of a DUI stop. So I know that research is ongoing. But what have you found so far?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: It's a big collaboration to lift off this clinical study. So we were really interested in--early on when we began wrestling with this, when we recognize that e-liquids contained ethanol, we were really concerned with, of course, the preliminary breath test. And, you know, and I'm rolling around in, well, what are some of the other implications? Because there is very little research on the impact of inhaling ethanol. We began thinking a lot about other implications, not just with DUI investigations, because there are other industries, agencies, organizations that will use the preliminary breath test, like, substance use treatment centers use a PBT, preliminary breath test. You know, some drug courts will use this. There are some drug--workplace drug testing locations will use a PBT as well. So it's not just about DUI investigations. We also started seeing where defense attorneys were posting on their websites that if you vape, they can essentially help you get off of the DUI. And so like I was stunned at the--at the hubris of that, but certainly that seems like a pretty bold claim with no scientific foundation.

So our first clinical study was we had people come in and vape either a 0% or a 20% ethanol e-liquid. And we had the police departments conduct the standardized field sobriety tests. We had the participants self-score, so they had to take little quizzes about how they felt after they vaped ethanol. And, you know, they were questions, like, did it make you feel sick? Did you feel impaired? Do you feel like you can drive? There were probably, I don't know, 30, 35 questions that they had to answer. And then, of course, we're--we are doing--we're conducting the PBT and the--and evidentiary breath test as well, at certain time points. And so what we--one of the things that we wanted to do was essentially test the question: When police, or if police observe this deprivation observation period, meaning that they have--they have eyeballs on the person to make sure that they're not belching to make sure that they don't have anything in their mouth, to make sure that they're not putting anything into their mouth like a mint. And then they administer the preliminary breath test. And so, the question was: is that--is that period of time long enough? So a 15 to 20-minute wait period, if somebody has belched or, you know, if there is alcohol in the mouth 15 to 20 minutes is a long enough time for that ethanol to absorb across the mucous membranes of the mouth. And because we want the PBT to only be measuring ethanol that comes out of the deep lung tissue. So the question was because ethanol is in those e-liquids and e-liquids are so sticky, is that 15 to 20 minutes long enough for ethanol to absorb across all that stickiness? So, we did a lot of PBTs and EBTs immediately after vaping. And so we showed that immediately after vaping 20% ethanol that the PBT picked up ethanol. And we had one participant actually blew a .07. And so, you know, that has lots of implications. You know, in all of those industries that we discussed, particularly if there's an industry or an agency that has a no tolerance policy, or we're talking about a child. And so, you know, we thought that was really important.

The other, I think, really important piece that came out of that, that poked a hole in this hypothesis that defense attorneys had was that the PG and VG do not give a false positive. Every single--every single study that we ran, that was 0% ethanol was negative, had no ethanol reading at all. So we were--we were not surprised by that. But, you know, this is the piece where a negative result is an important thing to publish. So we're really excited to get that into the scientific literature.

I think the other piece that is we have received--I couldn't even tell you, more than--more than 40 emails or communications from people saying, "I have failed my drug test for ethanol, and I don't drink." And so one of the things that we're going to be testing in the second clinical study is that we're going to be pulling blood, urine, and oral fluid in the second clinical and we're going to be--so patients are going to be drinking ethanol. So we're going to try to get them to a .08, and then we're going to have them vape. And so--and we're going to have, you know, they're going to vape, 0% or 20% ethanol, and then we're going to have of course placebos in that as well. And so the question is, for those who are just--those who are just vaping ethanol, we're going to be looking at a number of biomarkers that have forensic and clinical implications, is that does vaping ethanol give a rise in those biomarkers that are evaluated by a number of industries, is somebody going to test positive? So what--we're, you know, we have our officers trained right now. And we're literally calling our database to see if anybody's ready to come in. So we're literally launching that study now.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: That's fantastic.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. We're excited about it.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: Well, I appreciate you taking time to talk to us today, Dr. Peace. What would you most want our listeners to understand about vaping from all of your copious research findings?

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: I think the most important thing for a consumer to do when they--when they choose--when they choose to consume anything is that they are able to make an informed decision about what it is that they're consuming and understand what all of the consequences could potentially be. And if we don't have a transparent industry that is allowing the consumer to make those decisions then, you know, there--they could have adverse--they could have adverse events that, you know, that they're not--they don't understand. And if they don't understand it, are they reporting those to their physician? I think the other piece is that, you know, physicians also need, you know, to understand that there are serious--could be serious consequences for their patients who are also vaping. And that needs to be, you know, part of a conversation with the physician. And so, I think at the end of the day, it really is about consumers making informed decisions and knowing what they're consuming and what those consequences could be.

DR. FRANCES SCOTT: That's a great takeaway. The science of vaping and e-cigarette use is complicated. So if you choose to partake be an informed consumer and understand that vaping is probably not what you think. Thank you, Dr. Peace. And thank you to all our listeners for joining us.

DR. MICHELLE PEACE: Yeah. Thank you. I appreciate the time.

SPEAKER 2: To learn more about today's topic or about NIJ visit the links in the episode description and join us for new episodes every month.

Originally posted here:

Vaping: It's Not What You Think | National Institute of Justice - National Institute of Justice

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Smoke signals: Reddit users concerned by health risks of vaping – The Hub at Johns Hopkins

Posted: at 1:53 am

ByLisa Ercolano

A new artificial intelligence analysis of thousands of posts from the popular online discussion forum Reddit reveals that vapers are concerned about e-cigarettes' possible impact on everything from their respiratory, gastrointestinal, and cardiovascular systems to their mental and sexual health and sleep patterns. They also worry about the possibility of addiction, cancer, and dental problems.

"Our goal is to shed light on how the public, in their natural conversations, describe health concerns associated with vaping e-cigarettes," said Alexandra DeLucia, a doctoral candidate in computer science at Johns Hopkins University's Whiting School of Engineering.

DeLucia was part of a multi-institution team that conducted the research as part of the JHU's Center of Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation funded by the Food and Drug Administration. The team included colleagues from the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products, or CTP.

Alexandra DeLucia

Doctoral candidate, computer science

"The FDA CTP's mission is to protect Americans from tobacco-related diseases and death," DeLucia said. "Our hope is that hearing what 'real voices' are saying will significantly enhance understanding of how people think about e-cigarettes."

The researchers believe this information has the potential to inform new, more effective public health research and media campaigns by leveraging the voices and experiences of ordinary people who use e-cigarettes.

DeLucia worked on the analysis with Mark Dredze, an associate professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins and director of research (foundations of AI) at the university's AI-X Foundry; Adam Poliak, an assistant professor of computer science at Bryn Mawr College; and John W. Ayers, associate adjunct professor of medicine at University of California San Diego.

To find detailed discussions about e-cigarettes, the team turned to Reddit, with its 55 million daily users and about 10 million daily posts. Reddit was preferred over Twitter and other social media platforms because of its long, conversational format.

"Tweets are great for learning what restaurants someone went to last night or what political party they support," DeLucia said, "but when it comes to complex issues, we need richer data that goes beyond Twitter's social media character limits. Reddit gives us that."

In addition, Reddit conversations are conveniently organized into smaller communities called "subreddits," allowing the researchers to identify conversations related to vaping and to have confidence that the conversations being analyzed were relevant. To further focus their data, the team included only discussion threads and posts that contained the phrase "does ____ cause," DeLucia said.

"That allowed us to capture questions such as 'Does e-juice cause X' or 'Does vaping cause X?'" she said.

"What we learned was that people posting in discussion threads about e-cigarette use on Reddit primarily describe respiratory, gastrointestinal, and cardiovascular concerns," DeLucia said. "Less-cited concerns were neurological, dermatology, oral health, and sexual health. Additionally, psychiatry, oncologic, addiction, and sleep concerns were raised by posters."

Next steps for this research include applying this method to additional Reddit communities to discover perceived health outcomes of other products.

DeLucia and the team presented their findings at the annual meeting of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, held in early March in San Antonio.

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International speaker Tall Cop visits Monroe, talks about drug use … – Monroe Evening News

Posted: at 1:53 am

Vaping has become an epidemic among children, kids as young as second grade are vaping, and drugs could be hidden anywhere.

Those were some of the topics Officer Jermaine Galloway discussed earlier this week, during his workshop High in Plain Sight: Current Drug Trends, at Monroe County Community College. Galloway, who is 6 feet, 9 inches tall, goes by the nickname "Tall Cop."

Attending were about 90 people, mostly law enforcement officers and school resource personnel.

He is a dynamic presenter on current trends, and he is in high demand. I believe he was well-received, and I would say the attendees walked away with knowledge that they did not know prior to walking into the room, Vicky Loveland, coordinator of the Monroe County Substance Abuse Coalition, said. Loveland organized the workshop with Jean Foster, regional school health coordinator for the Monroe County Intermediate School District.

Gallowaycovered about 30 topics in Monroe.

Everything thats trending. I talked about fentanyl and things that travel with fentanyl, over-the-counter drugs, youth drug use, vaping, many things, he said.

Galloway shares the latest drug trends with audiences from professionals to parents. Because his program in Monroe was geared to law enforcement officers, he didnt want the content shared publicly.

Theres a fine line between education and teaching people stuff you dont want to teach them, Galloway said.

But Galloway did have plenty he could share about drug abuse with Monroe County families. Most parents, he said, are surprised by his information.

They say, Wow, we didnt know any of this. They say, I thought I understood drug trends. I did drugs, Galloway said. Dont for a second think you know. Its evolving so rapidly.

His No. 1 message: Vaping is an epidemic among school-age students across the country.

I dont use that term lightly. Heroin is an epidemic on the streets. Vaping is an epidemic for kids, and its not going away anytime soon. Vaping is by far No. 1, Galloway said.

While school-age children are still using prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs like Xanax, alcohol and fentanyl at increasing rates, none are at the use level of vaping.

Vaping also has become the new gateway drug, an introductory drug that gets users into increasingly more serious drugs.

Some think its cannabis. Its vaping, 100%. Some are using it in second and third grades, Galloway said.

Many children get vaping paraphernalia, either indirectly or directly, from their parents.

Parents cant find their vape pen; their kids are taking hits off it. Or parents (allow it), saying, At least my kid is not using hard drugs. They all start with the small stuff, and it evolves. Parents need to say, They arent doing the hard drugs yet, Galloway said.

Because nicotine is so addictive, parents cannot simply tell their kids to stop vaping, Galloway said.

Its highly addictive. The kids are addicted. They will need help. They will need treatment and other resources. You cannot use consequences to get out of addiction. Punishment simply doesnt work. You have to do something else, he said.

There is not a magic answer, Loveland said. He understands, though, that schools are not equipped to deal with the addiction, and suspension, whether out-of-school or in-school, are the only options they have.

Foster appreciated Galloways honest information on vaping.

He emphasized that this is not going away and in fact might get worse.I appreciated his depth of knowledge and the new information he brought to us all. Although scary, it is critical information for all of us, she said.

Galloway also offered warning signs that a child or teen is using drugs. While changes in behavior and new friends are warning signs, change in attitude is the biggest clue.

The I dont care attitude. All our kids always say that, but this is truly not caring what happens and what the consequences are. They give up on everything they used to love. Pay attention to that, he said.

Another warning sign of drug use is noticing items out of place.

A mom found drugs in a highlighter. Why did she search it? She said, My son is always moving it, but I never saw him using it. That stood out to her, he said.

Galloway spent 18 years in law enforcement before becoming a substance abuse trainer in 2002. Today, he travels to two to three states a week and speaks to 80,000 people a year.

It grew. At first it was locally, then around the state, which was Idaho at the time, then some neighboring states. My name started to get out and teaching took off from there. Now I train nationwide and in Canada, he said.

Galloway has received numerous awards for his work and gets letters and emails weekly from parents and law enforcement officers. Many tell him his message helped a child get treatment.

Galloway said he learns current trends through a boots on the ground approach.

I find information everywhere. People send me a lot. I spend a lot of time in stores, he said.

His training message changes almost daily.

I build each training for the group Im training. I work on it every week. Im always adding, he said. I take pride in getting you the information before the article comes out.

To learn more, visit tallcopsaysstop.com or Tall Cop Says Stop on Facebook.

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Thorsby students combat vaping with presentations – The Clanton … – Clanton Advertiser

Posted: at 1:53 am

Published 1:25 pm Thursday, May 11, 2023

1 of 3

A Thorsby High School science student gives her presentation on the epidemic of vaping to students on May 10. (CAREY REEDER | ADVERTISER)

All of the Thorsby High School science students who participated in the vaping presentations. (BRIDGET CATON | CONTRIBUTED)

A group of Thorsby High School students giving their presentation on May 10. (CAREY REEDER | ADVERTISER)

By Carey Reeder | Managing Editor

Stoichiometry is a tough lesson to get through for any high school chemistry student with the amount of math involved in it. However, Thorsby High School science teacher Bridget Caton came up with an idea to not only teach her students about stoichiometry, but give them a chance to make an impact on their school.

Stoichiometry, in more or less words, is a section of chemistry that involves using relationships between two reactants, or products, to determine desired outcomes.

This is a unit that students kind of get bored with because it is a lot of math, Caton said. I was trying to think of something that would engage them, and I wanted to do something real world and something that they got an opportunity to say This is what we want to do.

Caton started the lesson by asking what epidemics the students in this generation are facing in the real world. Depression, anxiety and stress were the big ones brought up. Students then talked about ways students cope with those things and vaping was mentioned.

Caton broke her class into seven groups and they were tasked with creating presentations about how harmful vaping is to those who do it, but also those around it as well. The students came up with the research on their own and designed their models which had to show the effects vaping has on the human body. Finally, the students came up with solutions for how vaping can be prevented at Thorsby next school year.

A lot of websites for vaping are geared more towards showing that it is not as bad as people make it out to be. Catons students had to navigate through those to find the proper information that combats vaping.

It was really hard to get everything together and the internet did not provide us with a lot of information, Faith Pledger, a Thorsby student who participated in one of the presentations, said. We had to come up with all the formulas ourselves, and it took a lot of time. It means a lot to us because not only are people vaping affected, but we are also affected by just walking in the hallway. It is a very harmful substance and we want to show people that they are not alone and there are resources where they can get help. We worked really hard to get here.

There was a lot of work put into it, Presley-Raye Knighton, one of Catons chemistry students who did a presentation, said. We had to dig really deep to find information and then apply that to everything Miss Caton has taught us. It was a lot of long nights at peoples houses working We really care about this subject and wanted to spread awareness.

Caton will continue to work with the vaping presentations and models the students put together in the fall when she has the same groups for an anatomy class. Each group presented fundraisers to help combat vaping on Thorsbys campus such as a bake sale to raise money for vape smoke detectors in all of the Thorsby bathrooms and counseling for students who struggle with vaping as an alternative to being suspended for it.

All of the ideas and fundraisers were student generated, and Caton plans to help them in any way she can to achieve those goals.

Overall, it was a very good lesson and they learned stoichiometry from it for sure, Caton said. They were able to contribute something that they came up with and that can help their school, siblings and themselves later on.

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Tina Satter on why her NSA whistleblower film Reality is stranger than fiction – Financial Times

Posted: at 1:53 am

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HBO film based on NSA leaker Reality Winner slated for May 29 … – Military Times

Posted: at 1:53 am

Former Air Force linguist Reality Winner was charged in June 2017 with sharing classified National Security Agency materials with a news organization. Now shes the subject of an HBO movie.

Sydney Sweeney (Euphoria) will portray the 25-year-old whistleblower who leaked classified documents to The Intercept about Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Winner was formally charged under the Espionage Act and sentenced to five years and three months in jail in 2018.

The docudrama, set to debut on May 29, focuses on the investigation into Winners motivations behind printing and sharing the documents.

Im trying to deploy, Im not trying to be a whistleblower. Thats crazy, she says in one scene.

Winner is portrayed in the beginning of the trailer as a quirky, but ordinary person, but as the serious nature of her actions begin to close in the walls around her, her unflappable demeanor slowly dissolves.

In 2019, Tina Satter put together a play, titled This is a Room, based on the transcript of Winners FBI interview. The play served as the basis for the HBO treatment.

Ultimately, Winner pleaded guilty and served a prison term until 2021, when she was moved to a halfway house.

Reality premieres May 29 on Max.

Observation Post is the Military Times one-stop shop for all things off-duty. Stories may reflect author observations.

Sarah Sicard is a Senior Editor with Military Times. She previously served as the Digitial Editor of Military Times and the Army Times Editor. Other work can be found at National Defense Magazine, Task & Purpose, and Defense News.

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Gen. Paul Nakasone Plans to Step Down as NSA Director … – Executive Gov

Posted: at 1:53 am

Gen. Paul Nakasone, director of the National Security Agency and commander of the U.S. Cyber Command and a 2023 Wash100 awardee, has shared with his colleagues that heplans to step down from the dual-hatted role in the coming months, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

An individual informed on the matter said that Nakasone intends to depart from his positions in August or September, while others said the possible retirement ofGeorge Barnes, deputy director at NSA, may alter the generals plans.

It was not clear whether Nakasone would retire or take on a new position within the Biden administration, according to multiple sources.

With Nakasone at the helm, NSA has improved its collaboration with Silicon Valley and CYBERCOM has advanced the persistent engagement and defend forward doctrines, the report said. Nakasone has served in these positions for over five years.

The current administration has not yet named a possible replacement for the NSA chief, but sources said Air ForceLt. Gen. Tim Haugh, deputy commander of CYBERCOM, has been included in the shortlist of names.

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Readout of NSA Jake Sullivan’s Meeting with CCP Politburo … – US Embassy & Consulates in China

Posted: at 1:53 am

Readout of NSA Jake Sullivans Meeting with CCP Politburo Member and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission Wang Yi - U.S. Embassy & Consulates in China

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Readout of National Security Advisor Jake Sullivans Meeting with Chinese Communist Party Politburo Member and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission Wang Yi

MAY 11, 2023

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan met from May 10-11 with Chinese Communist Party Politburo Member and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission Wang Yi in Vienna. The two sides had candid, substantive, and constructive discussions on key issues in the U.S.-China bilateral relationship, global and regional security issues, Russias war against Ukraine, and cross-Strait issues, among other topics. This meeting was part of ongoing efforts to maintain open lines of communication and responsibly manage competition. The two sides agreed to maintain this important strategic channel of communication to advance these objectives, building on the engagement between President Biden and President Xi in Bali, Indonesia, in November 2022.

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Young sheep farmers to be given genetic boost by new NSA giveaway – The Scottish Farmer

Posted: at 1:53 am

As with previous giveaways, this gives young sheep enthusiasts aged 18 to 35 the opportunity to win one of five MV accredited, performance recorded Romney rams, kindly provided by Rob and Jo Hodgkins, of Kaiapoi Romneys, through the Frank Parkinson Agricultural Trust. But new for 2023, NSA is also teaming up with the Dutch Spotted Sheep Society to giveaway five ram vouchers, each to the value of 750, to be redeemed at an official Dutch Spotted Sheep Society sale in 2023.

NSA communications manager, Katie James, who is co-ordinating the giveaway, said: The addition of the Dutch Spotted ram vouchers to the giveaway will mean even more young shepherds will be able to benefit from this initiative. The two breeds will offer sheep farmers from contrasting systems the opportunity to benefit from top class genetics that will help them progress their systems.

Edward Adamson, for the Dutch Spotted Sheep Society, added: As a relatively new breed in the UK the Dutch Spotted Sheep Society understands the difficulties of getting started and is pleased to take this opportunity to help some enthusiastic young sheep farmers establish their businesses and realise the qualities of the Dutch Spotted breed.

READ MORE:National Sheep Association slam Lynx reintroduction plans

The giveaway is just one element of the programme that encourages and supports the sheep farmers and service providers of the future. The programme is inviting applications from enthusiastic young sheep farmers in the UK who would like to be considered as a recipient of a Kaiapoi Romney ram or a Dutch Spotted ram voucher to apply and be considered by submitting a short video clip explaining the reasons for their application and an overview of why they believe they should be considered as a chosen recipient.

Applications opened on Monday, May 15 and will remain open until Monday, June 19. All applicants will be notified of whether they have made it to the next stage of the application process. Shortlisted applicants will be invited to an online selection interview during the week beginning Monday, July 17, 2023 via Zoom or Microsoft Teams, and the successful applicants informed within 48 hours.

For full entry guidance and terms and conditions of the giveaway visit https://go.nationalsheep.org.uk/GENE-eration.

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Sydney Sweeney wanted to be challenged by Reality: Its a different muscle playing someone who is real [Exclusive Video Interview] – Yahoo…

Posted: at 1:53 am

Few actresses under 30 could claim as much success as Sydney Sweeney over the last two years. Her breakout performance on HBOs Euphoria scored Sweeney a well-deserved Emmy Award nomination for Best Drama Supporting Actress in 2022 one of two nominations the 25-year-old landed last year (the other being Best Movie/Limited Supporting Actress for The White Lotus). That creative recognition has led her to numerous high-profile projects, including a key part in the Spider-man spinoff Madame Web opposite Dakota Johnson and a lead role with Glen Powell in the Sony romantic comedy Anyone But You.

But the prolific Sweeney who also maintains numerous brand partnerships and a heavy social media presence as well had never come across a project like Reality before. The new HBO film, co-written and directed by Tina Satter and based on her own play, is about the arrest of NSA whistleblower Reality Winner and unfolds in real-time, taking its dialogue and structure directly from the FBIs arrest transcript.

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SEEReality trailer: Sydney Sweeney stars as Reality Winner in new Max movie [Watch]

I am always searching for characters that I havent done before or challenged me in new ways than previous ones have, Sweeney tells Gold Derby in an exclusive video interview. So when Reality came across my table, I was very much drawn to it because of the challenge. And just the script itself. It was just a completely different thing than Ive ever seen before.

Reality opens with Winner being confronted outside her suburban home by two FBI agents (played by Josh Hamilton and Marchant Davis) and eventually moves to a back room in Winners house for the lengthy interrogation scene, which Sweeney estimates comprised almost 60 pages of the economical script. (Reality clocks in at under 90 minutes in total running time.)

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Once we got into that room, we were there and it was basically one scene, Sweeney explains. Tina did such an amazing job of flawlessly finding places to be able to cut because we couldnt film all of that in one day we filmed the whole movie in 16 days. And so we had 10 to 15 pages per day to film, and you kind of just start to feel the weight and the gravity of the situation as the walls slowly come closer and closer in as youre filming, because we filmed most of it in order.

When playing a fictional person like Cassie Howard on Euphoria, Sweeney spends months writing lengthy character bibles filled with details that help her understand the person shes tasked to create onscreen. But for Reality, Sweeney adopted a hybrid approach that combined her own creative imagination with actual conversations she had with Winner over Zoom and text message.

I wanted to find a mixture of the two [research methods] because I wanted to, of course, learn as much as I possibly could about Reality, she says. I knew the box within what her life was and her memories, and I wanted as much as I could learn from her. Then I took all of that knowledge, and I put it into my books, and I just expanded it from there so that I had it was more fleshed out.

Winner was arrested on June 3, 2017, and was sentenced in 2018 to five years and three months in jail for violating the Espionage Act of 1917. She received the longest sentence ever for releasing classified documents to the media but was released from prison in 2021 on account of good behavior. Sweeney says what surprised her about Winner was the former NSA translators sense of humor.

She has quite an interesting sense of humor about herself, Sweeney says. So once I learned that, and I got to know her, and I reread the transcript in the script, I saw so much of that in there that I didnt see before.

Sweeney says Winner supports Reality and her family attended the films premiere at the Berlin Film Festival this year, where Satters feature premiere to rave reviews for its star.

Its a different muscle playing someone who is real, Sweeney says of what shell take from the film. I definitely loved that. And I think that Id really enjoy finding another character thats based off of a real person and diving into the research on that person.

Reality premieres May 29 at 10 p.m. ET on HBO and will stream on Max.

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Sydney Sweeney wanted to be challenged by Reality: Its a different muscle playing someone who is real [Exclusive Video Interview] - Yahoo...

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