vendredi 25 juillet 2014

The Truth About e-Cigs: The Answer Will Come From Quantified Self

The reality is that at this point nobody really knows how e-cigs can affect health. There is no real knowledge about how bad e-cigs are. All we know for sure is that they are far from being as bad as combustion cigarettes. Researchers are working on the matter but studies are often controversial depending on who is financing them. It reminds me about the Wi-Fi issue.

On a behavioural point of view, there is no evidence that e-cigs are more or less addictive than cigarettes, and even less evidence that when you start vaping you end up smoking. All studies so far are biased because they are based on vapers' declarations, nothing is actually measured. This is why applying Quantified Self techniques to vaping would definitely give us objective and unbiased data to analyse and affect policy making in a knowledgeable way, independently from lobbies.

Three French startups are working on connecting vapers to their smartphone to collect data. Smokio and Kosmo are the first companies to provide connected e-cigs. The problems they are facing though are the price and the rapidly evolving e-cig technology. The third player, MyVaps has taken a different path by developing a module that fits between the atomizer and the battery, and connects any e-cig to a smartphone.

It might take a while before these companies collect enough information on vapers' behaviour but when they do, it will be very interesting to know when, where, how long and how much people vape.

Tell Young People the Truth: E-Cigarettes and Vaping Flavors Help People Quit Smoking | Tony Newman

Tell Young People the Truth: E-Cigarettes and Vaping Flavors Help People Quit Smoking | Tony Newman:



'via Blog this'