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Health
Public Health
15-Year-Old Texas Teen's Death Is Nation's Youngest Vaping-Related Fatality in Current Outbreak
The death of a 15-year-old in Texas marks what the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is calling the youngest vaping-related fatality in the U.S. since the current outbreak began last year.
Dallas County Health and Human Services officials reported the death of a teen “with a chronic underlying medical condition” who lived in Dallas County in a press release issued on New Year’s Eve and confirmed the teen’s age to TIME.
The incident is Dallas County’s first death related to e-cigarette, or vaping, product-use associated lung injury, local officials said. “Reporting a death in a teen due to EVALI is so tragic,” said director of the agency, Dr. Philip Huang, in a statement. “We are seeing that severe lung damage, and even death, can occur with just short term use of these products.”
The CDC said data suggests that the current outbreak began in June 2019. As of Jan. 7, 2020, the CDC has received reports of more than 2,600 hospitalized cases of EVALI — the official name for e-cigarette, or vaping, product-use associated lung injury — or deaths from 50 states, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Fifty-seven deaths have been confirmed in 27 states and D.C. with ages ranging from 15 through 75, according to the CDC, which notes that more deaths are “currently under investigation.”
Last month, the CDC announced that vitamin E acetate is a big reason for the country’s vaping-related lung illness outbreak, which it also indicated appears to be coming to an end.
E-cigarettes remain illegal for those younger than 18 but the law has done little to stop teens from vaping in greater numbers. Federal data notes that among middle and high school students, e-cigarette use rose from 3.6 million in 2018 to 5.4 million in 2019.
The New York Times reported that before the Texas teen’s death, the youngest reported vaping fatality was a 17-year-old who lived in the Bronx borough of New York City.
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Matt Guthmiller hops out of his aircraft in El Cajon, Calif., on Monday after finishing the last leg of his solo journey around the world. AP
A South Dakota teen may have become the youngest person to fly solo around the world.
Matt Guthmiller, 19, completed the more than 29,000-mile journey in a leased single-engine airplane late Monday night when he touched down at Gillespie Field in El Cajon, California.
Guthmiller made about two dozen stops in 14 countries during the journey that began May 31, according to his mother, Shirley, who greeted her son after his 16-hour final leg flight from Honolulu, Hawaii.
“Of course he looked tired,” Shirley Guthmiller said in a telephone interview. “I’m very relieved he is home, but I wasn’t worried.”
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology engineering student was sleeping late Tuesday morning, she said.
Matt Guthmiller took an early interest in aviation and was 16 when got his pilot’s license.
Guthmiller’s parents said he’s sending documentation to Guinness World Records, which must confirm that he broke the record.
Jamie Antoniou, the senior public relations manager at Guinness, said Guthmiller was approved to try and break the record before he left. Antoniou said Guinness expects to know for sure whether he broke it by Thursday.
The previous record was set by Jack Wiegand, who was 21-years-old when he circumnavigated the globe in about two months in 2013.
Australian Ryan Campbell claims he broke Wiegand’s record when he circled the globe last summer at age 19 years, seven months and 25 days old. Antoniou said Campbell applied to break the record but didn’t send in his evidence until “very, very recently.” She said the records team is assessing the evidence, but it’s still missing some.
Shirley Guthmiller said Campbell helped her son in planning the trip. Guthmiller began in El Cajon and headed for his hometown, where he graduated from high school last year.
“He made his first stop in Aberdeen and then headed out for the rest of the world,” Allen Guthmiller said.
He kept in daily contact with his parents by satellite telephone. He also routinely posted updates on social media.
“I’m proud of him and I really wasn’t worried,” his father said. “He had a good plane and a good plan.”
Guthmiller’s flight will help raise money for Code.org, a nonprofit website that helps teach people about computer coding, his father said.
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