Vapers gain victory in court ruling against FDA

By ACSH Staff — Dec 08, 2010
Yesterday marked another victory for e-cigarette manufacturer NJOY after a federal appellate court in Washington, D.C. unanimously upheld a lower court’s previous injunction against the FDA’s attempt to regulate the products as drugs or medical devices. The appeals court said that the e-cigarettes should instead be regulated under the less stringent 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, which allows the FDA to control tobacco products’ packaging and marketing.

Yesterday marked another victory for e-cigarette manufacturer NJOY after a federal appellate court in Washington, D.C. unanimously upheld a lower court’s previous injunction against the FDA’s attempt to regulate the products as drugs or medical devices. The appeals court said that the e-cigarettes should instead be regulated under the less stringent 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, which allows the FDA to control tobacco products’ packaging and marketing.

Concerned that e-cigarette makers were marketing their products as smoking cessation aids, the FDA tried to ban them as unapproved drug delivery devices. But according to yesterday’s court ruling, e-cigarettes are marketed for the pleasure of the product, not the therapeutic benefit of a drug or medical device.

“As long as e-cigarette makers mind their p’s and q’s and don’t try and tell smokers the truth — that e-cigarettes would be a major benefit to the 45 million addicted smokers who wish to quit, but can’t — they’ll be regulated as tobacco products and will hopefully be marketed without too much government interference,” says ACSH’s Dr. Gilbert Ross. “It’s a shame that the new law specifically prohibits e-cigarette makers — and smokeless tobacco marketers — from truthfully informing smokers about the huge difference in toxicity between cigarettes and non-combustion nicotine delivery products.”

Since companies like NJOY can’t market their product as a safer alternative to regular cigarettes, ACSH’s Dr. Elizabeth Whelan says that “it’s up to responsible public health organizations like ACSH to get that message out to the people.”

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