Proponents of vaping often argue it helps people quit tobacco, but a new study has found that while smoking rates among 14 to 15-year-olds have declined substantially in recent decades, the rise of e-cigarettes may have slowed that decline.
The study, published in The Lancet Regional Health—Western Pacific, found no evidence that vaping reduces harm for adolescents. Instead, it suggests vaping has “substantially added to harms,” particularly for Māori youth.
How Smoking Trends Shifted
Smoking rates—whether ever smoked, regular smoking, or daily smoking—fell across all groups over the 21 years. But the rate of decline slowed from around 2010, coinciding with the emergence of vaping. The trend was most pronounced for Māori students.Researchers compared expected declines based on earlier years with actual results.
Waa said that for every 1,000 Māori students, around 20 more are smoking than would have been expected if pre-vaping trends had continued.
“It does suggest that there’s some interaction going on, like vaping might be a pathway to smoking,” he said.
Waa argued that nicotine addiction among adolescents is returning to mid-2000s levels.
“Most people who vape today have never smoked, so all we are doing is leading them into using new products,” he said.
“Vapes are different from cigarettes, but nicotine is still just as addictive, if not more addictive, in these new vaping products.”
He warned that vaping is not a choice anymore once addiction takes hold.
“We’ve made big inroads in reducing smoking rates, but at the same time, we’ve allowed these [vaping] products to become available,” he said.
“We’ve got to change this idea that vaping products are a recreational lifestyle product. They are not; once you are addicted, there’s no choice to it.”
How the Study Was Conducted
The study was conducted by the universities of Otago and Auckland in New Zealand, and the University of Sydney and the Daffodil Centre in Australia.Researchers analysed data from the Action for Smokefree Year 10 Snapshot Survey, an annual study of a cross-section of year 10 students in New Zealand.
It is one of the largest ongoing surveys tracking adolescent smoking behaviours in the world, and analysed almost 600,000 students aged 14 to 15 between 2003 and 2024.







