Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 143 total)
  • Vaping in the workplace
  • Drac
    Full Member

    I’ve got dyslexia so to write a lenghty reply on a forum of the quality copy and pasted by Scapegoat takes a lot work from me, There will be somewhere evidence of long typed out responsses but not the standard you thought Scapegoat had typed but then that doesn’t fit in with you having a cheap pop at me by saying I was being pissy by poitning out the weakness in your argument. Then you trying to be dead cleaver and claim CO2 stops you breathing so can’t possbily be useful at all. Only to find yourself totally embarrasssed meant that you then decide to call me pissy as you looked such a tool, now added by you thinking Scapegoat had typed out his reply.

    Hold I need one of these. 😛

    tjagain
    Full Member

    nealglover – Member

    Neal – I am a pedantic git if you haven’t noticed whereas your doctor would be trying to give you the basics simply

    I can’t find anything in the links from the page you posted that says passive vaping is anything other than harmless/ of a risk.
    I may have missed something as I haven’t read it all. However I certainly haven’t found any conclusions, as you suggested, that say it should be considered dangerous ? [/quote]

    It says no harm can be proved not that its safe – this is a very different thing

    teasel
    Free Member

    find yourself totally embarrasssed

    ‘s weird. I really don’t feel embarrassment for anything I’ve written here today or yesterday or ever TBH. I have humility and can accept when I’m wrong. I’m just attempting to fit in by having laugh as most seem to do on this forum. Obviously DezB was correct when he claimed “as with all bants, it’s who’s doing it.” or something. I don’t understand that mentality.

    As for your writing style and the dyslexia – my apologies. I wouldn’t have ribbed you if I’d have known. Sorry.

    Edit : And to be fair what you’ve written is pretty offensive stuff not to mention pretty wide of the mark and confirms the rather nasty side you display on this forum on quite a regular basis, particularly to those with whom you don’t have “bants”.

    Drac
    Full Member

    As for your writing style and the dyslexia – my apologies. I wouldn’t have ribbed you if I’d have known. Sorry.

    No offence taken you didn’t take a cheap shot just claimed I was pissy due to my short responses.

    I’m really not sure how you think I’m being offensive at pointing how you came across but maybe you were having “bants” I’ve no I”d past caring to be honest.

    Anyway as I’ve say I’m not offended by your claim I can’t write more amused to think a forum demonstrates people’s writing skills.

    teasel
    Free Member

    pointing how you came across

    It actually reads as if you’re telling me how it is, to be honest.

    But **** it. It’s obviously an attempted laugh gone wrong so let’s just leave it there, eh.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Sounds like a plan.

    batfink
    Free Member

    vaping in the workplace (or vaping in general IMO):

    nealglover
    Free Member

    TJ, I’m sorry but your claim sounds like BS to me.

    I was told by my Doctor that research has shown that there was no risk associated with passive vaping.

    Every bit of research I’ve read on the subject concludes there is no risk.

    You claimed you’d seen reasesrch where….

    I can’t find anything even close to that in any research, or NHS information, and it’s the exact opposite of what I was told by the Doctor.

    Neal – I am a pedantic git if you haven’t noticed whereas your doctor would be trying to give you the basics simply

    This doesn’t really work either does it ?

    You think my Doctor tried to make it “simple” by giving me the exact opposite of the advice generated by the NHS after the research they funded.

    Either I’ve missed something, or you just made up the conclusion because it suited the one you already had.

    juanghia
    Free Member

    that research has shown that there was no risk associated with passive vaping.

    Does it matter? it’s foul disgusting clouds of sickly smelling crap that lingers in the air.

    It’s plain antisocial puffing them in public.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Does it matter?

    It does to me yes.
    Thanks.

    Scapegoat
    Full Member

    teasel and Drac
    Don’t fall out on my behalf! I included the reference to the material I had copied so that it was obvious I hadn’t typed it out.

    From my diver training days I simply remembered that some breath-hold or freedivers deliberately hyperventilate to increase O2 concentration, but this has the unfortunate side effect of flushing CO2 from the system. The carotid receptors work on both O2 levels which demand the body to breathe when O2 levels fall, but also when CO2 levels alter. It does this by rendering the body unconscious in order to kick-start the autonomous system whereby holding your breath is over-ridden. Thus some freedivers can increase their time under water by several minutes, with the risk that that time underwater can extend to several days. 🙁

    binners
    Full Member

    Does it matter? it’s foul disgusting clouds of sickly smelling crap that lingers in the air.

    It’s plain antisocial puffing them in public.

    U OK HUN? XX

    Tallpaul
    Free Member

    Taken from the link to the NHS website, posted above:

    E-cigarettes release negligible amounts of nicotine into the environment, and no health risks to bystanders (e.g. passive smoking) have been identified

    I’ve highlighted the important bit. Just because the NHS study didn’t identify any health risks from passive vaping, it doesn’t mean there are none. This is also a long way from stating it’s dangerous.

    The short of it is that the jury is still out. All that is confirmed is that vaping and passive vaping are significantly less harmful than smoking and passive smoking (and to be absolutely clear – less harmful does not mean harmless).

    Drac
    Full Member

    We’re best buddies now Scape. We take long walks and snuggle on the couch. No Netflix yet but I’m hopeful.

    highlandman
    Free Member

    Back to the original point- banned everywhere on my site in Dundee, both all tobacco smoking and vaping, by staff, visitors and the public. So no vaping allowed anywhere within the well defined outer perimeter of an office complex with gardens and parking.
    And guess what/ The vapers originally volunteered to join in with the pre-existing (Scottish) smoking ban, before our government issued its own guidance to include vaping within other forms of smoking. All smokers must leave the premises altogether.

    mboy
    Free Member

    If someone brought a ‘kipper in I’d have them both escorted from the premises. ask them to smoke it cos I’m planning on being back in time for breakfast. (-:

    Cougar
    Full Member

    What a guy.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    I’ve highlighted the important bit. Just because the NHS study didn’t identify any health risks from passive vaping, it doesn’t mean there are none. This is also a long way from stating it’s dangerous.

    I understand the phrasing, but my point is that no health risks have been found from passive vaping, and it’s not just the NHS study, no other studies have identified any health risks either (and there have been a lot)

    And it not like they aren’t looking for them is it. Or that they don’t know pretty much what to look for.

    How TJ can take that information, and correct me to claim that the conclusion was “It should be treated as dangerous” !?

    Well, as I said. Smells like BS.

    Tallpaul
    Free Member

    I think, given what is known about passive smoking, it’s reasonable to hold the position that passive vaping is a potential danger as there is simply no data on the effect of long term exposure. Therefore, steps should be taken to minimise the exposure to vaping for those who don’t voluntarily partake in the habit.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    I think, given what is known about passive smoking, it’s reasonable to hold the position that passive vaping is a potential danger

    Possibly. Although another way of looking at it, would be that after what was learnt, too late, about passive smoking, the research into passive vaping is far better structured and far more focussed and detailed.
    So if they can’t find any negative effects, then the chances are that there aren’t any. ?

    Just a thought.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Neal – because thats what it says in the report in waffle words

    mattyfez
    Full Member

    They’d be negligible compared to living in a city or driving a diesel car for balance with all the other fumes.

    Most if not all the health damage from smoking tobacco is from burning organic matter and directly inhaling it.

    Vaporising and inhaling a distinctively smaller range of chemicals, has several clear advantages, you’re not breathing in a burned substance, and that substance has far fewer chemical constituents than a cigarette does.

    Let’s not forget it’s not the nicotine that is the major health hazard in smoking, it is the burned inhaled organic matter that contains thousands of other chemical constituents.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Neal – because thats what it says in the report in waffle words

    What you realll mean, is that You have decided that’s what it says ?

    Despite it being fairly clear (to a Doctor for example) that it doesn’t.

    And in all the report conclusions I’ve read, they arrive at a different conclusion to you. (and I’ve read a fair few)

    I’ll wager you can’t find a single independent report conclusion that says it should be considered Dangerous.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Neal – thats what the report actually says. Quite clearly

    I paraphrase
    No risks have been identified but no long term studies have been done yet due to the fact its new tech and in the absence of evidence proving safety long term it must be treated as if it is a risk

    tjagain
    Full Member

    In a nutshell, best estimates show e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful to your health than normal cigarettes,

    That does not say they are safe but safer than cigs significantly

    None of the studies reviewed above alter the conclusion of Professor Britton’s 2014 review for PHE. While vaping may not be 100% safe,

    There is no way on earth 95% less harmful = safe!

    stevextc
    Free Member

    Lots of mis-information on this thread

    1) Nicotine is addictive … yes but it’s actually not that addictive by itself. The effect and addictive parts are hugely enhanced by at least 2 other components that come from burning tobacco

    2) Nicotine is toxic.. well yes it is… it’s a toxin like caffeine and you wouldn’t want either in significant quantities on your skin or elsewhere but a typical vaping fluid is only a few percent…
    Lots of things are toxic – indeed almost anything in sufficient quantity…

    3) Non smokers are nicotine free … not unless they don’t eat any of the nightshade family including potatoes and tomatoes… both contain nicotine

    3) Significant nicotine is exhaled….significant can be couched in the above.. are people getting MORE nicotine than eating a packet of crisps or a tomato sauce???
    The only viable published study published results and had panic, not on nictotine but on aluminium oxides….
    What is really significant is questions were asked where this came from as it wasn’t possible from the vaping…
    After much ado it was discovered a test subject had used a spray deodorant before the testing….

    The point is at the levels of detection no significant nicotine can be detected in the passive groups blood…. even when locked in a small closed room where the detection limits show that deodorant used hours before IS

    It’s vapour NOT particulates … so what is inhaled stays in the “vaper” unlike cigarette smoke….and what isn’t is not really significant in terms of do they get more than a tomato salad…

    The idea of absolute proof of “no harm” isn’t possible but it’s like saying I might die because I get hit by a recumbent cycle someone buys at the other end of the UK…. I can’t prove it won’t be resold to someone local and I can’t prove that one day I won’t be crossing the road and ….

    but the argument we should then ban all recumbent’s isn’t being made

    For years using a CD player or laptop on a plane was POSSIBLY going to cause it to crash … using a phone in a hospital may POSSIBLY cause all the life support to stop working …. a mobile phone is POSSIBLY going to ignite petrol vapour better than a spark plug (of which most cars have at least 4)… etc etc.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Neal – thats what the report actually says. Quite clearly

    I paraphrase
    No risks have been identified but no long term studies have been done yet due to the fact its new tech and in the absence of evidence proving safety long term it must be treated as if it is a risk

    Rather than “paraphrase” why don’t you just post a link to the report ?

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    Well I followed a bloke onto the station this morning who was producing a huge sweet, sickly smelling fog. I certainly wouldn’t want that next to me indoors.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Neal – the links are there its easy to find
    “We also do not yet have data on their long-term safety. However,the current best estimate by experts is that e-cigarette use represents only a fraction of the risk of smoking “
    So lower risk than smoking but not risk free. NO knowledge of long term effects.

    “regular exposure over many years is likely to present some degree of health hazard, though the magnitude of this effect is difficult to estimate”

    I can’t be bothered to find any more direct quotes

    nealglover
    Free Member

    I can’t be bothered to find any more direct quotes

    Can you find any quotes at all that are actually relating to passive exposure, which is what is being discussed.

    Neal – the links are there its easy to find

    So “Do your own research” eh?

    You are jivebunny and I claim my €5

    juanghia
    Free Member

    Well I followed a bloke onto the station this morning who was producing a huge sweet, sickly smelling fog. I certainly wouldn’t want that next to me indoors.

    Exactly, it’s an antisocial habit, regardless of it being harmless or not.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Exactly, it’s an antisocial habit, regardless of it being harmless or not.

    It’s not an “antisocial” habit.

    Some people are antisocial in the way they use an ecig. Plenty others aren’t.

    Some people are antisocial in the way they eat. Other aren’t. Eating isn’t an antisocial habit. Microwaving kippers in the office is though.

    If you got off your high horse long enough to realise that some people are actually trying to be responsible, by finding out the health implications, you might come accross as less of an opinionated dick.

    (You were trolling for a reaction obviously, so there it is)

    binners
    Full Member

    How is it on Planet Indignant this morning?

    We all ok? Nobody exploded with incandescent rage at the constant injustices life heaps upon them, have they?

    Nobody’s had someone break wind within a 100 yard radius of them? Or anything else simply frightful like that that would, like, just TOTALLY ruin the rest of your day?

    Good. Glad to hear it. Keep smiling!! I’m just having a vape. …. menthol, since you ask? 😀

    nealglover
    Free Member

    I found this quote using google.

    It’s not related to passive exposure so it’s not relevant to the discussion.

    I have googled this, but can’t find this quote anywhere.

    Is it also not related to passive exposure? Where is it from?

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Neal – we were obviously at cross purposes then. I thought we were discussing your GP saying it was safe.

    On passive effects then the risks will clearly be very small but not absent

    Second quote

    http://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/311887/Ecigarettes_report.pdf

    nealglover
    Free Member

    menthol, since you ask?

    Love monthol. I use menthol crystals dissolved in flavourless liquid.
    Lovely and clean taste, not sickly at all.

    nealglover
    Free Member

    Really ?
    Seems pretty clear to me what we were discussing.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    I think it would be reasonable to assume that if inhaling from e cigs directly carries 5% of the risk of smoking then passive inhalation risks would be of a similar % of the passive risks of smoking which would be fairly negligible but not zero.

    binners
    Full Member

    Who ****ing cares? Really?

    Listen…. you’re not going to get cancer. Well… not from people smoking e-cigs in your general vicinity anyway.

    And I’m far less likely to get cancer than I was 2 years ago, when I was doing in 20 Bensons a day. In theory anyway.

    To summarise…. in the nicest possible way…. can you please stop bleating FFS?!!

    😀

    mboy
    Free Member

    Binners is Jeremy Clarkson and I claim my £5!

Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 143 total)

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