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EMBARGOED UNTIL 12:01 AM, TUESDAY, DEC. 16, 2014 0 File - In this April 23, 2014 file photo, an e-cigarette is demonstrated in Chicago. More teens are trying out e-cigarettes than the real thing, according to the government's annual drug use survey. Researchers were surprised at how many 8th, 10th and 12th graders reported using electronic cigarettes this year, even as regular smoking by teens dropped to new lows.
EMBARGOED UNTIL 12:01 AM, TUESDAY, DEC. 16, 2014 0 File – In this April 23, 2014 file photo, an e-cigarette is demonstrated in Chicago. More teens are trying out e-cigarettes than the real thing, according to the government’s annual drug use survey. Researchers were surprised at how many 8th, 10th and 12th graders reported using electronic cigarettes this year, even as regular smoking by teens dropped to new lows.
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WASHINGTON — Electronic cigarettes have surpassed traditional smoking in popularity among teens, the government’s annual drug use survey finds.

Even as tobacco smoking by teens dropped to new lows, use of e-cigarettes reached levels that surprised researchers. The findings marked the survey’s first attempt to measure the use of e-cigarettes by people that young.

Nearly 9 percent of eighth-graders said they’d used an e-cigarette in the previous month, while just 4 percent reported smoking a traditional cigarette, said the report released Tuesday by the National Institutes of Health.

Use increased with age: 16 percent of 10th-graders had tried an e-cigarette in the past month, and 17 percent of high school seniors. Regular smoking continued inching down, to 7 percent of 10th-graders and 14 percent of 12th-graders.

“I worry that the tremendous progress that we’ve made over the last almost two decades in smoking could be reversed on us by the introduction of e-cigarettes,” said Michigan professor Lloyd Johnston, who leads the Monitoring the Future survey of more than 41,000 students.

Cigarette smoking fell to the single digits, with 8 percent of students saying they smoked in the previous month. That was down from a peak of 28 percent in 1997.

“The importance of this major decline in smoking for the health and longevity of this generation of young people cannot be overstated,” Johnston said.

E-cigarettes often are described as a less dangerous alternative for regular smokers who can’t or don’t want to kick the habit. The battery-powered devices produce vapor infused with potentially addictive nicotine but without the same chemicals and tar as tobacco cigarettes.

The survey didn’t ask about repeat use, or whether teens were just experimenting with something new. But between 4 percent and 7 percent of students who tried e-cigarettes said they’d never smoked a tobacco cigarette, noted University of Michigan professor Richard Miech, a study senior investigator.

“They must think that e-cigarettes are fundamentally different,” he said.

E-cigarettes began to appear in the U.S. in 2006 but this was the first year that the survey asked teens about them. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated that during 2013, 4.5 percent of high school students had tried e-cigarettes during the prior month, a tripling since 2011.

The CDC reported last week that 10 states permit the sale of e-cigarettes to minors. The Food and Drug Administration has proposed regulating e-cigarettes.

Bloomberg News contributed to this report.

Key findings

Other findings from the survey, funded by the NIH’s National Institute on Drug Abuse:

Marijuana use appeared to level off, with 6.5 percent of eighth-graders reporting past-month use, 17 percent of 10th-graders and 21 percent of 12th-graders. Nearly 6 percent of 12th-graders reported daily use.

Fewer teens are trying synthetic marijuana. About 6 percent of seniors said they had used fake pot this year, down from 8 percent last year and 11 percent in 2012. Closer look at teens’ marijuana use. 6A

Abuse of prescription painkillers is dropping. Six percent of high school seniors reported using the narcotics without medical supervision in the past year, down from 9.5 percent in 2004.

Nearly one in five 12th-graders reported binge drinking, defined as five or more drinks in a row in the previous two weeks. That’s down from one in four high school seniors in 2009.

16 percent of 10th-graders and 9 percent of eighth-graders had tried an e-cigarette in the past month

7 percent of 10th-graders and 4 percent of eighth-graders reported using regular cigarettes in the past month

Source: Monitoring the Future survey

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