Home » Santa Clarita News » Families in Action - Cary Quashen » Vaping In Santa Clarita: Alarming Trend Continues To Rise Among Youth
Vaping In Santa Clarita: Alarming Trend Continues To Rise Among
Photo courtesy of CNN

Vaping In Santa Clarita: Alarming Trend Continues To Rise Among Youth

Ed. Note: The following is a KHTS Feature story based on an interview with Cary Quashen of Action Family Counseling.

As vaping in Santa Clarita continues to gain popularity among local youth, experts from the Santa Clarita drug and alcohol rehab center Action Family Counseling are showing concern about the potentially harmful effects of the new trend.


Sponsored Articles


Don’t miss a thing. Get breaking Santa Clarita news alerts delivered right to your inbox.

“Right now vaping is the biggest thing there is– it’s huge right now,” said Cary Quashen, Action’s founder. “I think some of the reason why e-cigarettes and vaping was brought out was to help people get out of tobacco, but what we’re finding is people that would have never smoked in general are now vaping. It’s so attractive to these kids.”

Vaping In Santa Clarita: Alarming Trend Continues To Rise Among

Photo courtesy of CNN

Because vaping is so new, there is little information available regarding the potential health risks associated with the practice or if vaping is better or worse for users than cigarettes.

“We don’t know the real effects yet; it’s so new,” Quashen said. “People are saying it’s not as harmful (as cigarettes) because there’s not as many chemicals, and that could possibly be true. But again, who knows the long term effects, because it’s so new.”

While many see vaping as simply inhaling a “harmless” water vapor, the California Department of Public Health’s website, Stillblowingsmoke.org, states the practice is far from harmless.

Related: Heroin Use And Overdoses Soaring Among Prescription Drug Addicts

E-cigarettes used for vaping emit an aerosol that can cause lung irritation and a variety of respiratory problems, according to the website.

In addition, the H20 component of e-cigarettes generally also contains propylene glycol or vegetable glycerine, liquid carriers for nicotine. Though these properties are classified as “safe” by the FDA if ingested, inhalation can be harmful to airways, even causing asthma attacks in children.

Further, the FDA-approved flavoring agents contained in e-cigarettes may be safe to eat, but have been shown to damage lung tissue over time.

Despite these alarming findings, the popularity of vaping is “exploding” in cities like Santa Clarita, according to Quashen.

“Vape shops are popping up everywhere,” he said. “The scary thing is, it’s just like everything else: the gateway drug to substance abuse. Everybody always says it’s pot– no, it’s cigarettes. Now more and more kids are starting out vaping that would never have smoked, so it just throws another wrench in the mess.”  

Because of the prominence of social media and a lack of parental involvement with today’s youth, peer pressure to try things like vaping is also at an all-time high.

“The last thing a kid 12 and up does before they go to sleep? On social media with their friends,” Quashen said. “The very first thing they do when they wake up– before they go to the bathroom –is check their social media. There’s so little parental involvement versus peer pressure today.”

Quashen believes the way only way to stop potentially harmful trends like vaping from growing is for parents to get involved with their kids, especially at a young age.

“We need to really let our kids know, set up boundaries for our kids when they’re little,” he said. “Right now, we spend so little time with our kids that parents don’t even know what’s happening until it’s happened. So as parents, we really need to spend time with our kids. We need to stay in tune with them, and we need to check in, not out.”

KHTS Feature Story

Action Family Counseling is a Santa Clarita drug and alcohol rehab center. Action has drug and alcohol residential treatment locations in Santa Clarita, Piru and Bakersfield, as well as intensive drug and alcohol outpatient programs in Santa Clarita, Simi Valley, Ventura, Pasadena and Bakersfield. Action Family Counseling supports and reinforces changes in behavior patterns so that adolescents and adults, or clients and their families, can fully indoctrinate the philosophies and principles needed to remain abstinent and stabilized for life.

Action Family Counseling

22722 Soledad Canyon Road

Santa Clarita, CA 91350

Office: 661-297-8691

24-Hour Helpline: 800-367-8336

Do you have a news tip? Call us at (661) 298-1220, or drop us a line at community@hometownstation.com.

Vaping In Santa Clarita: Alarming Trend Continues To Rise Among Youth

2 comments

  1. Trash journalism. No legitimate citations, and resources that only push negative points. The research has been done. The scientific proof of the safe aspects of vaping versus smoking has been released. Simple Google searches will give all of the info you need. And, it is not very common at all for someone to start vaping unless they were a smoker first. That is per the CDC. Please, before you publish drivel with a spin while trying to create a false sense of neutral objectevity, do your homework.

  2. This article is 100% true, kids all around are vaping. It is exploding! We have a crisis on our hands.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

About Melissa Lampert-Abramovitch

Melissa Lampert-Abramovitch has been writing for KHTS since Feb. 2014. She currently writes “Community Spotlight” and feature stories, and coordinates all aspects of both the”KHTS Adopt a Pet” video feature series and “Top Things to Do in Santa Clarita.” She is the creator of “KHTS Adopt a Pet” and acted as News Editor from 2019-2020, as well as Features Director and Newsroom Manager from 2016-2018. A former Valley Publications Staff Writer, Melissa was a contributor to the Santa Clarita Gazette and Canyon Country Magazine from 2015-2016. She has published feature stories with Pet Me Magazine, The Pet Press, The Signal, COC's Cougar News, and KJAMS Radio.