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By Robert Treadway The Washington Times [08/06/01]
Herbal cigarettes look harmless enough in the hands of 16-year-old Twinetta Linx.
The package, adorned with leprechauns and shamrocks
using the brand name Herbal Gold, could be mistaken for that of a
box of candy.
But health officials say they are deadly and that because of a loophole it is legal to sell them to children.
The Federal Trade Commission issued a statement
last year that herbal blends "are not statutorily required to bear a Surgeon
General's warning and are not subject to laws that bar tobacco sales
to minors."
Herbal cigarettes have been around since 1997
and are gaining in sales. Instead of tobacco and nicotine, the cigarettes
contain catnip, wild lettuce, damiana, passion flower and marshmallow.
They are often marketed as a safe alternative to tobacco smoking. Health professionals say that is nonsense.
"Light tobacco? That truly is not the case,"
said Dr. Anne O'Donnell, associate professor and chief of pulmonary critical
care
at Georgetown University Hospital.
"Any smoking has the potential for medical problems and an addiction to the smoking itself."
She said each year new patients come into her
office at younger ages to be treated for the effects of smoking. She said
youngsters might use herbal cigarettes as a stepping stone to tobacco.
"The physical act of smoking and starting on
that path, especially as a child, would make someone more likely to pick
up the
habit **of smoking tobacco cigarettes**," Dr. O'Donnell said.
In addition to lung disorders, Dr. O'Donnell
said smokers are more susceptible to oral cancers and coronary and vascular
diseases.
Mitch Zeller, former director of the Food and
Drug Administration's smoking division, said the agency did not test the
effects
or the ingredients of herbal cigarettes. Mr. Zeller's department was
closed last year when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that
Congress did not give the FDA authority over smoking enforcement.
Twinetta tried regular cigarettes and didn't
like them. She said she started smoking because the grown-ups around her
were
doing it.
"I started taking puffs o f my mom's when she wasn't looking," she said.
After the first time, she ran out of the house and started coughing and choking in the backyard.
She tried the Herbal Gold after a friend told
her the cigarettes weren't as bad as regular smokes. Now she is used to
lighting
up a cherry-, vanilla- or mint-flavored cigarette when her parents
aren't around.
"It's relaxing. It makes you feel good," she
said. But she said she hopes her mother isn't reading this article, even
if she isn't
breaking the law.
The most recent move to ban the sale of them
to minors came last year when the New York City Council voted 45-0 to ban
the sales of herbal cigarettes within city limits.
Last year the FTC forced two companies, Santa
Fe Natural Tobacco Co. and Alternative Cigarettes, to post a disclaimer
on their packages saying they are not safer than traditional smokes.
The brands initially marketed them as a safe
alternative to conventional cigarettes and the 599 additives the tobacco
industry
admitted it uses. Now the brands carry the warning: "Herbal cigarettes
are dangerous to your health. They produce tar and
carbon monoxide."
"The companies we have gone to have not shown
any proof that they are safe," said Brenda Mack, press officer for the
FTC.
Ms. Mack said Santa Fe and Alternative were
the only two companies they have imposed restrictions against, but that
is not
to say they are not investigating other herbal cigarette makers. They
just can't talk about which companies are next, she said.
Sales are brisk for the herbal alternatives.
Benjamin Bright, president of Temple of Ecstacy Corporation, said his company
is
selling millions of packs of Ecstacy cigarettes a year.
He said legally he cannot make a claim as to
how safe his product is but said, "I would prefer them over tobacco." Mr.
Bright said there have been no health studies on his products.
Baltimore-based HerbalEcstasy.cc is the largest
online seller of the Ecstacy brand cigarettes, selling 1,000 packs a week.
A man who would identify himself only as "Lou"
said he operates the Web site. Lou said he usually doesn't see his customers
but said his top buyers are smokers who want to quit smoking.
"It's not a 'get high' product," Lou said. "It's a smoking alternative."
Joe Camp, operations manager of Riverdale Organics
in Riverdale, said most buyers are occasional partygoers and people
trying to quit smoking, although he gets plenty of reorders. But nothing
keeps the company from selling to minors.
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