Impacts of Vaping
Vaping causes lung disease
This graph highlights a rapid and alarming increase in vaping-related lung disease over a very short period
+ info
Vaping causes you to inhale thousands of chemicals
Vapes often contain harmful chemicals such as nicotine, propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, flavoring agents, and in some cases, toxic substances like formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and heavy metals such as lead and nickel.n.
+ info
Vaping increases risk of cancer
People who both smoke and vape are reported to have four times the lung cancer risk compared to those who only smoke.
+ info
Fatal risks of vaping
As of Feb. 4, 2020, 2,758 cases of hospitalizations or deaths from EVALI were reported by all 50 states
+ info
Impacts of Vaping
Increased depression and depressive symptoms
A review found that vape users had higher rates of depression, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempts compared to non-users. In a U.S. youth survey, 42.1% of current vaspe users reported moderate‑to‑severe symptoms of depression and anxiety, compared to 21.0% of non‑users.
+ info
Hightened anxiety and stress
Nicotine activates the body's stress response by increasing cortisol and adrenaline levels. Additionally, nicotine withdrawal can heighten feelings of nervousness and anxiety. A study among university students in Egypt found that daily vapers were significantly more likely to experience anxiety (odds ratio [OR] = 8.32) and stress (OR = 2.56) compared to non-vapers. Source: sbirt.ms
+ info
Impaired cognitive function
In neural stem cell models showed toxic effects on mitochondrial function and induced cellular stress responses.
+ info
Correlation with ADHD, PTSD & other psychiatric symptoms
Among middle and high school students, current e‑cigarette users were much more likely to report moderate-to-severe depression or anxiety symptoms vs non‑users (42.1% vs 21.0%).
+ info
Impacts of Vaping
Kowen Erstad
Created on October 14, 2025
Start designing with a free template
Discover more than 1500 professional designs like these:
View
Advent Calendar
View
Tree of Wishes
View
Witchcraft vertical Infographic
View
Halloween Horizontal Infographic
View
Halloween Infographic
View
Halloween List 3D
View
Magic and Sorcery List
Explore all templates
Transcript
Impacts of Vaping
Vaping causes lung disease
This graph highlights a rapid and alarming increase in vaping-related lung disease over a very short period
+ info
Vaping causes you to inhale thousands of chemicals
Vapes often contain harmful chemicals such as nicotine, propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, flavoring agents, and in some cases, toxic substances like formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and heavy metals such as lead and nickel.n.
+ info
Vaping increases risk of cancer
People who both smoke and vape are reported to have four times the lung cancer risk compared to those who only smoke.
+ info
Fatal risks of vaping
As of Feb. 4, 2020, 2,758 cases of hospitalizations or deaths from EVALI were reported by all 50 states
+ info
Impacts of Vaping
Increased depression and depressive symptoms
A review found that vape users had higher rates of depression, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempts compared to non-users. In a U.S. youth survey, 42.1% of current vaspe users reported moderate‑to‑severe symptoms of depression and anxiety, compared to 21.0% of non‑users.
+ info
Hightened anxiety and stress
Nicotine activates the body's stress response by increasing cortisol and adrenaline levels. Additionally, nicotine withdrawal can heighten feelings of nervousness and anxiety. A study among university students in Egypt found that daily vapers were significantly more likely to experience anxiety (odds ratio [OR] = 8.32) and stress (OR = 2.56) compared to non-vapers. Source: sbirt.ms
+ info
Impaired cognitive function
In neural stem cell models showed toxic effects on mitochondrial function and induced cellular stress responses.
+ info
Correlation with ADHD, PTSD & other psychiatric symptoms
Among middle and high school students, current e‑cigarette users were much more likely to report moderate-to-severe depression or anxiety symptoms vs non‑users (42.1% vs 21.0%).
+ info