Guidance to Employers on Integrating E-Cigarettes/Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems Into Tobacco Worksite Policy

In recent years, new products have entered the marketplace that complicate decisions about tobacco control policies and prevention in the workplace. These products, called electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) or electronic nicotine delivery systems, most often deliver nicotine as an aerosol for inha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of occupational and environmental medicine 2015-03, Vol.57 (3), p.334-343
Hauptverfasser: Whitsel, Laurie P., Benowitz, Neal, Bhatnagar, Aruni, Bullen, Chris, Goldstein, Fred, Matthias-Gray, Lena, Grossmeier, Jessica, Harris, John, Isaac, Fikry, Loeppke, Ron, Manley, Marc, Moseley, Karen, Niemiec, Ted, O’Brien, Vince, Palma-Davis, LaVaughn, Pronk, Nico, Pshock, Jim, Stave, Gregg M., Terry, Paul
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container_end_page 343
container_issue 3
container_start_page 334
container_title Journal of occupational and environmental medicine
container_volume 57
creator Whitsel, Laurie P.
Benowitz, Neal
Bhatnagar, Aruni
Bullen, Chris
Goldstein, Fred
Matthias-Gray, Lena
Grossmeier, Jessica
Harris, John
Isaac, Fikry
Loeppke, Ron
Manley, Marc
Moseley, Karen
Niemiec, Ted
O’Brien, Vince
Palma-Davis, LaVaughn
Pronk, Nico
Pshock, Jim
Stave, Gregg M.
Terry, Paul
description In recent years, new products have entered the marketplace that complicate decisions about tobacco control policies and prevention in the workplace. These products, called electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) or electronic nicotine delivery systems, most often deliver nicotine as an aerosol for inhalation, without combustion of tobacco. This new mode of nicotine delivery raises several questions about the safety of the product for the user, the effects of secondhand exposure, how the public use of these products should be handled within tobacco-free and smoke-free air policies, and how their use affects tobacco cessation programs, wellness incentives, and other initiatives to prevent and control tobacco use. In this article, we provide a background on e-cigarettes and then outline key policy recommendations for employers on how the use of these new devices should be managed within worksite tobacco prevention programs and control policies.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/JOM.0000000000000420
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subjects ACOEM Guidelines
Adult
Electronic cigarettes
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems
Human exposure
Humans
Occupational Health
Organizational Policy
Prevention programs
Product safety
Smoke-Free Policy
Smoking cessation
Tobacco smoke
United States
Workplace
title Guidance to Employers on Integrating E-Cigarettes/Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems Into Tobacco Worksite Policy
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