E-cigarette use is becoming more common among teens, a new report says. Poisoning from e-cigarettes is on the rise, according to a new government report. Researchers found a steady and rapid increase in the number of calls to poison control centres about e-cigarettes and the liquid nicotine used in them, according to the study, released recently by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

   A total of 215 calls involving e-cigarettes were made to U.S. poison control centers in February 2014, up from one call in September 2010, said researchers who examined data from poison centers over that period. More than half of these calls involved children aged five and younger, and about 42 per cent involved people age 20 and older who were poisoned by ingesting liquid nicotine, or absorbing it through the skin, according to the study. Liquid nicotine is sold to refill e-cigarettes, the batterypowered devices that deliver nicotine, flavourings and....

Want to keep reading? Subscribe now

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Subscribe Now