Other Tobacco Products Appeal to Children

An emerging public health concern are other nontraditional tobacco products, such as new dissolvable tobacco products, flavored tobacco products (smoked little cigars and smokeless), and electronic cigarettes.

Dissolvable Tobacco Products

New dissolvable tobacco products made to look like candy are especially appealing to small children and teens:

The FDA is considering regulating new dissolvable tobacco products that are not FDA-approved for helping to quit smoking. Read more on our dissolvable tobacco webpage.

Flavored Tobacco Products

Flavored tobacco products appeal to teens and young adults. The 2009 federal law bans characterizing flavorings in cigarettes, except for menthol. But other tobacco products are still allowed to be flavored, such as little cigars, cigars, loose tobacco and product for hookah smoking, and chew, snus and dissolvables.

New York City was the first city in the nation to pass an ordinance banning the sale of all flavored tobacco products. The banned flavors include any fruit, chocolate, vanilla, honey, candy, cocoa, alcoholic beverage, herb or spice. U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Products LLC filed a lawsuit against NYC claiming the ordinance was illegal. The New York City court ruled to uphold the law in November 2011. Visit our news alert on the subject to learn more.

Read more about public health concerns with flavored tobacco on our flavored tobacco webpage.

Electronic Cigarettes

Learn more about the public health concerns with e-cigarettes in our e-cigarette section and White Paper

Last update: 12/7/11