As concerns mount about the potential health impacts of vaping, particularly on teenagers, Michigan has announced a statewide ban ― both in stores and online ― on all flavored electronic cigarettes, including sweet, fruity and menthol varieties.

Michigan is the first state to prohibit flavored e-cigarettes, which preliminary studies have shown are more likely to get young people hooked on vaping, according to The Washington Post.

The ban is expected to go into effect in a few weeks after it’s filed with the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office, a spokesperson for Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) told the Detroit Free Press. The prohibition will last for six months, the newspaper said, with the option to be renewed for an additional six months.

During this period, the state’s health department plans to develop regulations to permanently ban flavored e-cigarettes, the Post reported, citing Whitmer’s aides.

“My number one priority is keeping our kids safe and protecting the health of the people of Michigan,” the governor told the paper on Tuesday of her decision to impose the ban, which also restricts the use of misleading descriptions like “safe” and “healthy” to advertise vaping products.

Whitmer noted that she’d been compelled to take action after the state Department of Health and Human Services declared vaping among young people a public health emergency.