Practice Economics

Senate calls for childproof packaging for ‘e-cig juice’


 

References

The Senate passed a bill that would require childproof packaging for liquid nicotine products.

The Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act of 2015 (S. 142), also would codify Food and Drug Administration authority to regulate the packaging of liquid nicotine that is used to refill various electronic nicotine delivery systems.

Sen. Bill Nelson

Sen. Bill Nelson

S. 142 passed by unanimous consent in the Senate on Dec. 10. The House of Representatives has not taken action on the bill.

“Just a small amount of this stuff can injure or even kill a small child,” Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), the bill’s sponsor, said in a statement. “Making these bottles childproof is just common sense.”

In 2014, poison control centers received more than 3,000 calls related to e-cigarette nicotine exposure, including one toddler death, according to a statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

“With e-cigarettes becoming more and more common in households across the country, we cannot afford to wait another day to protect children from poisonous liquid nicotine,” AAP President Dr. Sandra Hassink said.

gtwachtman@fronlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

After 3 years of decline, hospital injury rates plateau, report finds
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Health spending growth soars after years of low growth
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Senate votes to gut ACA, defund Planned Parenthood
MDedge Emergency Medicine
The "Bottom Line"
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Gap between public, private hospital payment rates widening
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Analysis finds 28.8% prevalence of depression in residents
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Cigna CEO David Cordani: ACA marketplace is still in ‘version 1.0’
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Women physicians outnumber men in ob.gyn., lag in other specialties
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Federal rule could reduce payments for out-of-network emergency services
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Medicare audits: What leads to an exclusion?
MDedge Emergency Medicine