Health
WHO Warns Vaping Is Driving a ‘New Wave of Nicotine Addiction’ Among Youth
Despite a global decline in smoking rates, the World Health Organization (WHO) has sounded the alarm over a sharp rise in e-cigarette use, warning that vaping is fuelling a “new wave of nicotine addiction,” particularly among young people.
According to the WHO’s latest global tobacco trends report, more than 100 million people now use e-cigarettes, including around 15 million children aged 13 to 15. The UN health agency says this surge threatens to undermine decades of progress in the fight against smoking.
While traditional tobacco use has fallen from 1.38 billion users in 2000 to 1.2 billion in 2024, one in five adults worldwide still use tobacco products, causing millions of preventable deaths each year. “Millions of people are stopping, or not taking up, tobacco use thanks to tobacco control efforts by countries around the world,” said WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “But the tobacco industry is fighting back with new nicotine products, aggressively targeting young people. Governments must act faster and stronger in implementing proven tobacco control policies.”
For the first time, the WHO has released global figures for e-cigarette use, finding that children are nine times more likely than adults to vape in countries where data is available. “E-cigarettes are fuelling a new wave of nicotine addiction,” warned Etienne Krug, WHO’s Director of Health Determinants, Promotion and Prevention. “They are marketed as harm reduction, but in reality, are hooking kids on nicotine earlier and risk reversing decades of progress.”
The report also highlights a gender divide in tobacco use. Women have achieved the global reduction target five years early, with smoking rates falling from 11 percent in 2010 to 6.6 percent in 2024. The number of female tobacco users dropped from 277 million to 206 million during that period. In contrast, progress among men has been slower—male prevalence fell from 41.4 percent to 32.5 percent, and the global reduction target may not be met until 2031.
Regionally, Europe remains the heaviest-smoking continent, with 24.1 percent of adults using tobacco. European women record the highest smoking rates globally at 17.4 percent. The Western Pacific region follows closely with 22.9 percent, while Africa has the lowest prevalence at 9.5 percent. Southeast Asia, however, has seen the sharpest decline, with male smoking rates dropping from 70 percent in 2000 to 37 percent in 2024.
Health experts warn that vaping’s rapid rise poses new dangers. “We now know enough to conclude e-cigarettes are not harmless,” said Professor Maja-Lisa Løchen, a cardiologist at the University Hospital of North Norway. Speaking to Euronews Health, she noted that about 22 percent of 15- and 16-year-olds in Europe now vape regularly—up from 14 percent just five years ago.
“Vaping often acts as a gateway to smoking real cigarettes,” Løchen said, adding that the tobacco industry is using sweet flavours and flashy designs to target children. Recent studies, including one published in the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that vaping can increase the risk of stroke by nearly a third.
Health
World Cup Emotion Can Strain the Heart, Cardiologists Warn Fans at Risk
As the World Cup begins, medical experts are cautioning football fans with underlying heart conditions that the emotional intensity of matches can place unexpected strain on the cardiovascular system.
Cardiologists say that the excitement, tension, and anxiety generated during high-stakes games can trigger physical reactions similar to intense exercise, raising heart rate, blood pressure, and stress hormones.
“Intense emotions, whether positive or negative, can act as ‘precipitating risk factors’ for cardiovascular events such as heart attack,” said Paola Santalucia, a cardiologist and board member of the European Heart Network.
She explained that moments of extreme excitement, such as a decisive penalty shootout or a last-minute goal, may pose risks for people already living with heart disease. Those with additional risk factors, including hypertension, obesity, or smoking habits, are also advised to be cautious during emotionally charged matches.
Research using wearable devices has shown that during major football events, some fans experience heart rates climbing as high as 150 beats per minute. That level is comparable to sprinting and reflects how strongly the body reacts to emotional stress.
A study examining supporters during the 2025 German Cup final found that even watching from home can significantly affect physiological responses. “They still had an increase in heart rate that compares to walking, even though they didn’t walk,” said Christian Deutscher, professor of sports economics at Bielefeld University and co-author of the study.
He noted that the most intense reactions often occur not during goals themselves, but during moments of uncertainty such as VAR checks, penalty shootouts, or shots striking the post. These unpredictable situations, he said, are what drive the strongest emotional and physical responses among fans.
Deutscher also pointed out that stadium spectators may experience even greater strain due to environmental factors such as heat and alcohol consumption.
However, experts emphasize that football itself is not inherently dangerous. Instead, it is the body’s natural response to excitement that can create temporary stress.
“The adrenergic stimulation is at its max: extreme high blood pressure, high heart rate, and adrenaline, cortisol, skyrocketing,” said Dan Atar, professor of cardiology at Oslo University Hospital. In rare cases, he added, this surge can contribute to the rupture of arterial plaque in vulnerable individuals, potentially leading to a heart attack.
Atar stressed that such events can occur in everyday situations as well, including physical exertion like shoveling snow. “It is in no way dangerous to watch a football game,” he said. “All this is physiologic. It’s not dangerous to be excited.”
Still, he acknowledged that combining emotional stress with alcohol, heat, and pre-existing conditions can increase risk for some viewers.
Doctors advise those at higher risk to continue prescribed medications, limit alcohol intake, avoid smoking, and watch for warning signs such as chest pain or irregular heartbeat.
“The key message is not to avoid enjoying the match, but to do so with moderation and awareness,” Santalucia said.
Health
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Health
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