In excess of 100 million individuals, featuring at bare minimum 15 million children, now employ e-cigarettes, driving a new surge of nicotine habit, according to current global medical reports.
Children are, on average, nine times more likely than mature individuals to use e-cigarettes, per available worldwide figures.
E-cigarettes are fueling a "recent wave" of nicotine dependency, stated a senior health official. "These devices are promoted as damage limitation but, actually, are ensnaring youth on nicotine sooner and risk weakening years of advancement."
"Numerous of individuals are stopping, or refraining from tobacco usage thanks to tobacco regulation efforts by nations throughout the planet," the official stated.
"In response to this substantial advancement, the tobacco sector is resisting with recent nicotine items, actively targeting youth. Authorities must take action quicker and more forcefully in applying tested tobacco-control policies," the representative continued.
The vaping figures are an approximation since some nations - 109 in total, and numerous in African and Asian regions - lack statistics.
Based on the analysis, as of February this period, at minimum 86 million e-cigarette users were mature individuals, primarily in high-income states.
And at least 15 million adolescents aged 13 and 15 presently engage in vaping, based on studies from 123 countries.
Even though many states have attempted to implement e-cigarette regulations to address youth vaping in recent years, by the close of 2024, 62 nations yet had no regulation in operation, and 74 countries had no age limit at which e-cigarettes are allowed to be acquired, states the health body.
Meanwhile, tobacco use has been declining - from an projected 1.38 billion consumers in 2000 to 1.2 billion in 2024.
Frequency of tobacco consumption among women fell the largest - from 11% in 2010 to 6.6% in 2024.
With men, the reduction was from 41.4% in 2010 to 32.5% in 2024.
But a fifth of grown-ups worldwide even now employs tobacco.
Smoking is connected to numerous diseases, like cancer.
Specialists say vaping is far less harmful than traditional cigarettes, and can aid you cease smoking. It is discouraged for non-smokers.
Vaping devices avoid burning tobacco and do not create black substance or CO, two of the most damaging substances in tobacco fumes. They include nicotine, which can be addictive.