It may seem like a reasonable idea to use vaping as a way to cut down on tobacco cigarettes, but the implications of this switch are becoming increasingly concerning as South Africa’s vaping numbers skyrocket.
Bad news for South Africa’s new driving licence cards, Joburg chief whip wounded during charity event, Stellenbosch University does damage control, Neuralink implants chip into brain of first human test subject, and How Cape Town’s bin scroungers are doing us all a favour.
City bans e-cigs. Pacific Islands cocaine boom. Clooney’s next Netflix project. Airbnb’s new luxury tier. Samuel L Jackson angry. Thriller girl lives in poverty. Mystery of high-altitude suicides. Mueller to testify.
British America Tobacco is planning to stake its claim in the local e-cigarette marking by buying out Twisp, which could see vape prices skyrocketing.
Ask most e-cig users and they will tell you (at great length) about the wonders of switching to the vape. But does science back up those claims and should smokers think about the switch?
If you haven’t yet had a tug on an e-cigarette you’re doing it all wrong. We’re not here to preach but sometimes you can have your cake and eat it.
I’ve never been a smoker, so being able to inhale other people’s wonderful, new and scented exhaled smoke is such a treat. Also, my hair smells better in the morning.
A new study reveals that e-cigarettes are proving to be a more reliable deterrent for people to quite smoking.
California banned smoking in public places over 20 years ago, which is why the site of DiCaprio having a smoke inside the Golden Globe Awards ceremony caught some people off guard. It’s all good though, he was just taking a hit of his e-cigarette. Meanwhile, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who was sitting alongside a surprised-looking Reese Witherspoon, was […]
It’s holiday time. Some of you might be smoking. Some of you who sometimes smoke are more than likely going to be smoking at some point in the next three weeks. In the spirit of education and fairness, please take note of five things you didn’t know about e-cigarettes.
Second-hand smoke from traditional cigarettes contain more than 5,000 different elements – ranging from the extremely harmful to the not-so-benign. But what about second-hand smoke from e-cigarettes?
With production increasing everyday, the debate around e-cigarettes is hotting up. On the one hand, they can save lives. On the other, there are those who (correctly) point out that we need to be doing more research before we hail the e-cigarette as the second coming in health science.
A few days ago we posted a story about how anti-smoking lobbies were shouting down e-cigarettes. Despite the negative press, e-cigarettes are coming on strong, unabated by the efforts of corporate-sponsored anti e-cigarette protests, and a recent development in NY has seen a the construction of a sprawling e-cigarette bar in the heart of the city.
Organisations like the WHO, the British regulator MHRA and other health-oriented NGOs are all putting in as much effort as they can to spread the bad news about e-cigarettes. They’ve even gone so far as to publish false information about e-cigarettes, backed up by fake surveys. So what gives?
Tighter E-Cig restrictions rejected. Kris and Bruce Jenner overs. Sex pest teacher tweeted several kids. Kelly Khumalo arrested. US Basketball tickets go for R10 million. Tom Hanks has diabetes.
Ariel Castro hanged himself. Attempt made to burn down ANC headquarters. Senators back Obama. Russia warns citizens about traveling to US. 3 changes to Bok side. Rodman heading back to North Korea. ’50 shades’ fans upset about cast. E-cig makers go to war.
E-Cigarettes have become more popular than sliced bread. Celebrities have hopped on the bandwagon and e-cigarette companies are now sponsoring sports stadiums. The trend is growing so rapidly that the market is expected to exceed $1 billion this year. Having been caught rather by surprise, the US government is looking at how they can regulate this market.
Merthyr Town, in Wales, home of The Martyrs football team and their stadium, Penydarren Park will undergo a name-change to appease their latest sponsors, a electronic cigarette company. By September, the stadium will officially be called…wait for it….The Cigg-e Stadium.