If you're curious about who's using e-cigarettes these days, a new survey offers a snapshot. It looked at adults across the United States who currently vape and asked about their relationship with traditional cigarettes. The report describes the percentage of these users who are current smokers, former smokers, or people who have never smoked cigarettes at all.
Here's the catch: the survey didn't report the actual numbers or percentages. We know the question was asked and that the report describes the distribution, but we don't have the specific figures to understand the scale. This means we can't say how common it is for a vaper to also be a smoker, or how many vapers have never touched a cigarette.
It's important to remember what this kind of data can and can't tell us. This was a survey, not a controlled experiment. It captures a moment in time and shows associations—like what groups of people are doing—but it can't prove that vaping causes someone to start smoking or helps them quit. The findings are purely descriptive. Without the specific numbers, it's a limited picture, but it points to the complex reality of how people use nicotine products.