On 2017 Oct 11, Clive Bates commented:
The most misleading thing about this paper is not merely the paper itself, but the way authors chose to present the findings to the media. As so often happens in academic work in this field, association became causation, uncertainty became confidence and very weak methods became the foundations of an assertive press release.
The press notice headline is:
Vaping doubles risk of smoking cigarettes for teens.
Of course, that is a made-for-media headline but deeply misleading about causation and grossly over-confident, given the study's limitations.
Much more likely is that the characteristics (personality, social and family context) that cause people to smoke also cause them to vape and the effects measured are the result of uncorrected confounding or reverse causation. It is quite possible that vaping acts to prevent smoking in people who would otherwise be susceptible to taking up smoking - an obvious possibility given the decline in teenage smoking in the US that coincided with the rise of vaping (albeit mostly experimentation and mostly without nicotine) - trends charts here.
My more detailed review of this study is here: Review of controversial Canadian ‘gateway effect’ study
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