The New York Times Gets it Wrong
A recent report in the New York Times managed to get all the facts wrong.
THOMAS H. MAUGH stated that:
1. 19 varieties of electronic cigarettes were analysed.
WRONG: Two varieties were analysed in the FDA report.
2. Many contained diethylene glycol.
WRONG: One contained diethylene glycol.
3. Half contained nitrosamines (the same carcinogen found in real cigarettes).
THE FULL STORY: Yes - but to find these they had to test at 40 parts per trillion. What was not mentioned is that cigarettes contain 300 - 1400 times the amount of nitrosamines contained in electronic cigarettes. (See a comparison by Professor Michael Siegel.)
The question is, is this just lazy journalism, or are journalists part of a concerted campaign to discredit the alternative to a product that kills hundred of thousands of people every year.
Filed under: media
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