Ridgefield High School senior Madi Langer still remembers the first time she tried vaping.
She was 15 years old and hanging out with one of her best friends. When her friend, an accomplished gymnast, offered Langer a Captain Crunch cereal flavored e-cigarette or “vape,” Langer didn’t think it was a big deal.
“My friend was really athletic. And I looked up to her,” Langer, now 17, says. “I thought, ‘If she’s doing it, it can’t be that bad for you.'”
Two years later, Langer is a youth ambassador for the national Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and using her short stint as a tobacco and marijuana user to help her peers — as well as adult policy-makers — understand just how easy it is for young people to get hooked on the nicotine-infused vapes.
As a Tobacco-Free Kids ambassador, Langer is trying to raise awareness about the prevalence of vaping amongst young teens — in September 2018, Food and Drug Administration commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb called vaping among youth “an epidemic” and said e-cigarette manufacturers must begin to discourage sales to teens and children.
Langer says vaping is common amongst her peers and that she sees teens vaping at least four times a day. She believes one way to discourage youth vaping is to raise the legal age for tobacco products from 18 to 21 years old.