Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Two teenage girls vaping.
Two teenage girls vaping. - Credit: creativephotographing.mail.ru / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Health
nicotine
smoking
vaping
snus
cigarette
vape
Nicole Kraiijvanger
emergency room
Leiden University Medical Center
emergency physician
pediatrician
Pulmonologist
teenager
Trimbos Institute
Vapen#Jouwkeuze
hospital
Thursday, 13 November 2025 - 10:20

Share this article:

Dutch hospitals do 1-day study into emergency room patients with nicotine-related issues

Today, Dutch hospitals will record how many patients come to the emergency room with medical problems caused by smoking, vaping, or using snus. Dutch doctors want to map out the actual impact of nicotine on emergency care, NOS reports.

People regularly end up in the emergency room with complaints related to long-term smoking, like heart problems, strokes, and chronic bronchitis. Doctors have long suspected that a growing number of people require emergency care due to nicotine use. “We now want to know for sure,” Nicole Kraiijvanger, an emergency physician at Leiden University Medical Center and the initiator of this study, told NOS.

Doctors are also increasingly concerned about teenagers vaping. Research by the Trimbos Institute showed that a quarter of 12 to 16-year-olds have used a vape at least once. Four percent do so daily. Nicotine concentrations in vapes are high and very addictive due to the use of nicotine salts that quickly reach the brain. Unlike with cigarettes, where it often takes years to become seriously ill, children who vape can quickly develop serious illnesses.

“Nicotine is particularly bad for teenagers, because it disrupts brain development,” Esther Croes, an epidemiologist at the Trimbos Institute, explained to NOS. “This can cause permanent brain damage and mental health problems like anxiety disorders, concentration problems, and depression. Brain damage is irreversible.”

That is part of the reason why the professional associations of emergency physicians, pediatriticians, pulmonologists, the Trimbos Institute, and the vaping-prevention platform Vapen#Jouwkeuze want to get he facts straight. The results of today’s study should help improve policies to prevent smoking and vaping.

More like this

Image
Smoking a cigarette
Vaping, smoking, snus causing dozens of daily ER visits due to nicotine overdoses
Image
Vaping
"Smart vapes" have arrived in Netherlands; Doctor concerned
Image
Two disposable vapes on a blue background
Many teenagers still buying vapes at Dutch stores despite ban
Image
Two disposable vapes on a blue background
Severe nicotine addiction: Dutch teens waking up at night to vape
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Incoming Heineken chief receives 25 million euro share package
  • New Utrecht Council to push home construction, low-cost housing; Property tax up 15%
  • Wildfire risk rises as heat drives up drought pressure across the Netherlands
  • Man held for armed robbery of bound sex workers near The Hague facing 7 years in prison
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide

Top stories

  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide
  • Dutch official joins EU talks with Taliban on return of rejected asylum seekers
  • NS cancelling trains on key routes this week due to heat; Passengers will need water
  • Heineken board taps JDE Peet’s exec. Rafa Oliveira as new CEO
  • More Dutch households can't make ends meet; Over half of young adults struggling

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content