
In its latest effort to appease regulators, electronic-cigarette maker Juul said Thursday it would stop selling its creme-, fruit-, berry-, and mango-flavored pods in the US until the products have been reviewed by the US Food and Drug Administration. The company will, however, continue to sell its popular menthol-based flavors, including mint. Juul has faced a number of public setbacks in recent months.
Main Idea: Juul is pulling fruit and dessert flavored pods from US stores while it waits for the FDA to review them, as the company faces growing pressure over teen vaping and safety claims.
Key Points:
Teens and adult users may keep seeing mint and menthol vape pods, so the FDA and Trump administration face pressure to curb youth vaping and health harms.
Pulling fruit and dessert flavors may reduce products that appeal to kids while the FDA reviews safety.
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Juul CEO whose statement and leadership are directly tied to the company’s response.
Named public figure quoted reacting to Juul’s decision and driving anti-vaping pressure.
Central regulator investigating Juul and reviewing the flavored products.
Major corporate owner tied to Juul through its 35 percent stake and executive background.
Named advocacy group calling for a complete ban on flavored e-cigarettes.
Named federal agency investigating Juul as part of the company’s regulatory pressure.
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Sign in to commentNamed advocacy group reacting to Juul’s announcement and criticizing its impact.
Central executive-branch actor that threatened a flavored-vaping ban and shaped the regulatory backdrop.
Cited as the source for youth vaping statistics and context.
Mentioned through Juul’s funding of a ballot measure tied to the city’s e-cigarette ban.