The Brown University Child & Adolescent Psychopharmacology Update | 2019

Former FDA commissioner on keeping children away from vaping

 

Abstract


USPSTF issues draft recommendations for nicotine prevention for children The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends that primary care clinicians provide interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent initiation of tobacco use among school-aged children and adolescents. However, there is not enough evidence to recommend tobacco-cessation interventions in this population, according to the draft recommendation, released in June. The USPSTF is not part of the U.S. government, but its recommendations are taken into consideration by clinical and payer organizations. It only makes recommendations for interventions when it has found adequate evidence that the interventions do more good than harm. In the case of tobacco interventions, the task force found no evidence at all of harms of providing behavioral prevention interventions. However, once kids are already using nicotine, there is not enough evidence to recommend for or against cessation options. The recommendations were first published in the Annals of Internal Medicine and in Pediatrics in 2013; the final draft recommendations were issued in June, for public comment by July 22. For a link, go to https:// www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/ Page/Document/draft-recommendationstatement/tobacco-and-nicotine-useprevention-in-children-and-adolescentsprimary-care-interventions. Former FDA commissioner on keeping children away from vaping Scott Gottlieb, M.D., former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and now a fellow at the conservative think tank the American Enterprise Institute, wants to establish rules for vaping, and these could include setting up a system for e-cigarettes to be overthe-counter (OTC) medicines, nicotinereplacement tools like gum and patches. In a June 24 opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal, he writes that e-cigarettes can be a tool to help adult smokers quit, while also keeping teens away from smoking, but he says this will be a “tough job” scieNce BRief When naloxone alone isn’t enough: 5% of patients in ED for opioid overdose die within a year

Volume 21
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/cpu.30421
Language English
Journal The Brown University Child & Adolescent Psychopharmacology Update

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