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New FDA Ads Feature Dead Animals, Scary Chemicals

In this article we will cover
Formaldehyde: the first anti-vaping research fad
The FDA loves scary-sounding chemicals
FDA: adults are immune to Real Cost half-truths 
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The FDA’s Real Cost anti-tobacco campaign has been attacking vapes and vapers for almost six years now, beginning with the 2018 “Epidemic” ad, a tribute to chemophobia that featured a school full of vape victims with invisible worms crawling under their skins. 

Since then, the agency has hired high-priced advertising execs to claim vaping “magically” turns vapers into smokers, engage in old-fashioned Drug War-style stigma, and collaborate with Marvel Comics to portray vaping as a form of “mind control.”  

It’s back to chemophobia this year, with a (so far) short series of ads featuring the original chemical vaping villain: formaldehyde. 

Formaldehyde: the first anti-vaping research fad

It’s been nine years since a research letter to the New England Journal of Medicine launched the first anti-vaping research fad: using methodological tricks (or mistakes if you’re feeling charitable) to produce “dangerous levels” of formaldehyde and other carbonyls from open-system vaping setups.

The formaldehyde craze happened because it was (and is) easy to produce high-carbonyl vapor by using a mod set at very high voltage settings, which overheats or burns the wick and liquid and delivers unvapeable vapor. Another trick (mistake) is to take weak draws on a sub ohm tank that requires rapid, high-volume air flow to deliver reasonable cool vapor. 

Cardiologist and vape researcher Konstantinos Farsalinos—who had identified the “formaldehyde problem” immediately—eventually co-authored (with chemist Gene Gillman) a systematic review of 32 “formaldehyde studies,”describing the pitfalls of the research and creating useful research guidelines. Farsalinos concluded that, when “realistic use conditions were ensured, carbonyl emissions from e-cigarettes were substantially lower than tobacco cigarette smoke,” and that modern vaping atomizers “appeared to emit minimal levels of carbonyls with questionable clinical significance in terms of health risk.”

The FDA loves scary-sounding chemicals

When used as intended, vapes don’t produce dangerous levels of formaldehyde. When they do contain it, it’s because the vapor is so overheated it’s caustic to users and repulsive to inhale. The FDA knows all that. But why let scientific facts get in the way of a good TV commercial?

There are three versions of the Real Cost formaldehyde ad—all featuring appropriately hideous taxidermied animals watching a young vaper standing outside the taxidermy shop. With wired-together jaws and rotting teeth, they don’t look very healthy, but the vaping teenager is the one in real trouble.

“Hey, did you know that kid is vaping the same toxic chemical that’s used in taxidermy—formaldehyde?” asks the wise dead wolf. The other dead animals have a hard time pronouncing the name of the chemical and wacky hijinks ensue.

There’s a taxidermy-free ad too, perhaps aimed at kids with more delicate sensibilities. In that one, sewage leaks from an open pipe into a pond, while a narrator compares the “beautiful and fragile ecosystem” to human lungs. “When you vape,” he says, “you may be exposing yourself to toxic chemicals. Are you polluting yourself?”

FDA: adults are immune to Real Cost half-truths 

The FDA, of course, insists that its anti-vaping screeds are strictly targeted at youth—as though such a thing is even possible in the internet age. Last year, Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) Director Brian King told the audience at an American Vapor Manufacturers Association (AVM) online event that the ads have been “rigorously evaluated” both before and after they aired.

But a 2022 study published in the journal Nicotine & Tobacco Research found that, for adult smokers who viewed them, the FDA Real Cost ads “resulted in overall more negative expectancies about e-cigarettes,” including reduced motivation to switch from smoking to vaping.

Although adult Real Cost ad viewers believed e-cigarettes were “significantly less harmful (in general) than combustible cigarettes” before watching the ads, they changed their minds and decided the two products were “comparably harmful” after viewing.

Both adults and kids would benefit from an honest ad campaign that explained the actual risks of vaping for non-smokers, and the potentially huge benefits for people who do smoke. But, despite occasionally admitting that vaping is less harmful than smoking and referring to the nicotine product “continuum of risk,” FDA leaders tasked with educating the public about tobacco have never seen the need to tell the whole truth about vaping and non-combustible nicotine products.

Image courtesy YouTube.

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About Authors
Jim McDonald
846 posts

Smokers created vaping for themselves without help from the tobacco industry or anti-tobacco crusaders, and I believe vapers and the vaping industry have the right to continue innovating to give everyone who wants to use nicotine access to safe and attractive non-combustible options. My goal is to provide clear, honest information about vaping and the challenges nicotine consumers face from lawmakers, regulators, and brokers of disinformation. You can find me on Twitter @whycherrywhy

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