0 an electronic device that looks like a cigarette and allows someone to breathe in nicotine (= the drug found in tobacco) using vapour (= gas from heated water) rather than smoke, so there is no tar (= the harmful black substance produced when tobacco burns) -- 电子烟
Long banned comparative advertising for cigarettes and other tobacco products, e-cigarette advertising on television and radio in a number of countries may be indirectly advocating traditional cigarette smoking.
The majority of users who tried e-cigarette, continue to smoke traditional cigarettes.
With the spread of e-cigarette use, calls to poison control centers related to possible ingestion or skin exposure to e-cigarette liquids have increased.
All other indoor places, including workplaces, bars, restaurants, and hotel/motel smoking rooms are excluded from the state's e-cigarette regulations.
In a literary study of e-cigarette health risks, 388 different symptoms were reported, mouth and throat concerns generating more negative symptoms than any other group.
The e-cigarette brands have been rapidly expanding using aggressive marketing campaigns similar to those used to popularize cigarettes in the 1950s and 1960s.
Recommendations point to a strong regulatory framework for e-cigarette distribution in order to ensure the safety, quality, and that marketing and sales are restricted to adults.
Instead, the only regulations on e-cigarette usage in public spaces is in public educational facilities and on grounds thereof.