Minimum Effort, Maximum Impact: The Anti-Vaping Junk Science of Rebecca Williams
If you want a constant stream of junk science on a topic, one thing
you’ll need is some researchers willing to crank out a shoddy paper in
support of your cause, ideally without putting too much work into it.
For e-cigarettes, the junk science never seems to let up, and there are
plenty of researchers wary enough of vaping to allow some apparent bias
to creep into how they conduct and report the results of their studies.
One recent example led to widespread declarations that “e-cigarettes don’t help people quit smoking,”
but as soon as you take a look past the headline, you see that it
wasn’t a study that could have possibly led to that conclusion – some
researchers just examined Google search trends related to vaping.
The name on the study seemed familiar, Rebecca S. Williams. A little Google search later (which is apparently a highly scientific discipline) and the reason became clear: she isn’t new to this game. This is actually the third
time her name has been attached to a laughable piece of anti-vaping
junk science that required little more than browsing the internet. Let’s
take a look at all three of them and enjoy a moment of silent
appreciation of her contribution to the cause of criticizing vaping for any reason you can think of.
1 – Divining People’s Intentions Through Keyword Analysis
The newest study
from Dr. Williams, Dr. John Ayers and others managed to drag “e-cigs
are useless for quitting” headlines out of an analysis of search
keywords. Seriously.
According to Williams:
The
e-cigarette industry, the media, and the vaping community have promoted
the notion that e-cigarettes are an effective device for quitting
smoking, yet what we’re seeing is that there are very few people
searching for information about that.
Although the researchers presented some
findings that may be of use to some people – for example, the word
“e-cigarette” is declining in usage and being replaced with “vaping” or
related words – it’s safe to say the whole endeavor was a waste of even
the minimal effort required. Plus, if you’re familiar with vaping and
the evolution of the language used, the shift away from “e-cigarettes”
is hardly surprising.
The attention the study received
stemmed from a couple of results, with each making headlines separately
about a month apart: only about 3 percent of searches related to vaping
used terms that suggest concern about health risks (e.g. “e-cigarette
risks”) and 0.3 percent or lower were clearly related to quitting
smoking. The example they gave of this type of search is “do
e-cigarettes help smokers quit?”
To see the catastrophic issue with this assumption: let’s just Google it. First, you’re presented with this:
And secondly, only three of the first 30 results actually provide anything resembling useful information on quitting smoking by vaping. Really, only the second
result actually contained tips. There are a hell of a lot of “do e-cigs
help you quit” news stories, but very little in the way of the sort of
practical tips you probably want. Here’s a wild idea: maybe that’s why not many people bother searching for it.
The
authors seem to imply that the searchers for “buy e-cigarettes” are
about “shopping,” rather than quitting smoking. There are so many issues
with this that it’s hard to know where to start. It seems they were
unable to imagine that people might know what they want to do
before they start searching for something. Vaping is a replacement for best online quality vaporizer . If you want to vape instead of smoke, you just try to vape
when you would have smoked. You don’t need a special type of e-cigarette
or anything in particular to do so, you just need to buy an e-cig and give it a go.
There
are plenty of tips that can help along the way, but if you were
interested in quitting smoking, you would hardly need to add “quit
smoking” to the end of your search. It would be like searching for
“decaffeinated coffee” but then inexplicably feeling the need to add “to
quit caffeine.”
As Michael Siegel notes, the authors seem to think they can read the minds
of the searchers based on the keywords that they choose. If they had
that ability, I’m pretty sure they could get a better job than adding to
the mountain of anti-vaping junk science: they could help law
enforcement work out when someone was searching “buy knives” because
they’re planning a murder rather than just planning on cutting up some
vegetables.
2 – Kids Can Buy E-Cigarettes Online… If They Have Their Parents Driver’s License and Credit Card
“And all I had to do was steal my dad’s identity.”
This study led to claims that “teens can easily buy e-cigarettes online,” with three out of four attempted e-cigarette purchases being vape online. The study did find that, but a couple of points undermine the result to the point of making it entirely meaningless.
Firstly, the study notes:
Youth
buyers were recruited with a parent who gave written permission for his
or her child to use the parent’s driver’s license to attempt to bypass
age verification.
And secondly:
All purchases were made with credit cards issued for each youth buyer in his or her own name or his or her parent’s name. (emphasis mine)
So,
“most teens can buy e-cigarettes online easily” should really read,
“most teens with access to a parent’s driver’s license and credit card
can buy e-cigarettes online easily.” Somehow, I don’t think that would
have been quite as headline-friendly.
In fairness to the authors, a follow-up study did
require youth to use their own cards and their own ID, and the results
showed that very few vendors performed the checks necessary to confirm
that the purchaser was old enough to vape. Why they didn’t just do this
the first time around is anybody’s guess, but the fact that the concerns
turned out to be justified in no way excuses the first, thoroughly
absurd attempt to demonstrate it.
3 – Researchers Discover Vaping Conventions, Are Inexplicably Horrified
“Aaah! Look at all the particles in the air! There isn’t even a ‘vaping is going to kill you’ booth!”
This is the most laughable and lowest-effort study of the bunch: it consists of Rebecca Williams learning about vaping conventions using Google and then prattling on about how public health doesn’t get invited to come along and throw cold water on the festivities.
She writes:
Vaping
conventions promote e-cigarette use and social norms without public
health having a voice to educate attendees about negative consequences
of use.
Well who’d have thunk it? Next she’ll
be bemoaning the fact that rock festivals don’t include a booth full of
people yelling about how “loud music can damage your hearing” as Slayer
blares out Raining Blood or how beer festivals don’t have a booth of
busybodies warning everyone about liver disease. We’re trying to have fun!
She then goes on to suggest that since people vape at the conventions (the horror!),
“Future research should focus on the effects of attending these
conventions on attendees and on indoor air quality in vapor-filled
convention rooms.”
And that study happened,
too. The researchers came up with the startling revelation that rooms
full of people vaping contain vapor, and all they had to do was sneak
around and hide what they were doing while ignoring any potential
ethical issues (as discussed by Carl V. Phillips and Clive Bates). They’re expecting their Nobel Prize any time now.
Want to Join the Crusade Against Harm Reduction? Get Your Laptop Out!
The primary lesson from Rebecca Williams and her colleagues’ forays into e-cigarette research is that you can accomplish a lot
if you just have an internet connection and are capable (ish) of using
Google. If you follow in her footsteps, you might just discover that the
worrying (and apparently in no way whatsoever related to quitting
smoking) trend of people searching for “buy e-cigarettes” is continuing!
Egad! You might even find out that these “VapeCons” don’t display giant
neon warning lights saying “These products are not approved as smoking
cessation devices.” And if you do, journals and journalists will
apparently be lining up to give you a platform from which to spout
whatever nonsense suits your agenda.
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