November 9 – According to foreign media reports, a German study shows that e-cigarettes are remarkably effective in stopping smoking, which is in line with previous research by scientific institutions in the UK, the US and Australia.

Separately, a US study showed that e-cigarettes did not increase the risk of respiratory symptoms.

A study has been carried out in Germany to see if e-cigarettes can be an effective aid to quitting smoking. The study, published in the German medical journal Deutsches Arzteblatt, followed 2,740 smokers aged 14 to 96 with big data and found that e-cigarettes were far more effective at quitting smoking than other methods.

The second study, conducted by 19 researchers of various nationalities and published in the journal Addiction, involved 3,516 smokers in Australia, the UK, Canada and the US. All study participants were seven times more likely to quit smoking using e-cigarettes than those who had not tried them, the authors note in the paper.

In fact, the effectiveness of e-cigarettes in smoking cessation has previously been proven by several scientific institutions. Back in 2016, a UK study confirmed its greater effectiveness in quitting, and three years later Public Health England reported that it had a “success rate of between 59.7% and 74%,” the highest of any alternative.

Researchers in the United States came to the same conclusion, with a success rate of “65.1 percent.” In Australia, researchers mentioned an average success rate of 96 percent when using e-cigarettes compared to quitting without help.

Separately, 22 researchers at several universities and research centers in the United States conducted a new study on the relationship between adult smoking and respiratory symptoms. To do this, they recruited 16,295 adults from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Survey conducted by the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

They grouped people into groups who used various product types (cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, e-cigarettes, etc.). The results of the data study showed that users of all categories of products, including cigarettes, had a higher risk of respiratory symptoms. For the most part, people who use e-cigarettes specifically do not have an increased respiratory risk.

Source: Blue Hole New Consumption

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