Only a sliver of vaping-related lung illness victims used products bought at recreational marijuana stores, according to new data published Tuesday, in contrast to Oregon’s victims, all of whom bought products at legal stores.

The new report from federal health officials underscores Oregon’s unique place in the epidemic.

Most of the victims nationally who fell ill after vaping cannabis products and then told officials where they got the products cited informal sources such as friends, dealers or online stores.

That’s not the case in Oregon. For all 13 victims who vaped THC, the chemical in marijuana that makes people high, state health officials said there’s they purchased products at legal stores. The same was the case for the nicotine products victims vaped.

The latest count in the lung illness epidemic: 2,602 people nationally contracted the disease and 57 died as of Jan. 7. Two of the deaths were in Oregon. As of Jan. 2, Oregon has had 22 victims total.

Of 783 victims who reported precisely where they bought their THC products, 8%, or 63 people, said they bought them at recreational stores, and 27 people said they bought them at medical marijuana dispensaries.

People should consider not using any vaping products, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday, including those with nicotine.

The epidemic has seen a dramatic decline in cases in recent months. The CDC is confident that a primary culprit has been vitamin E acetate added to illicit THC vape products, but the agency hasn’t dismissed the possibility that other substances have caused or contributed to the illnesses.

Of the nearly 2,000 people for whom the CDC has substance use data, 264 said they used only nicotine products. In Oregon, seven victims used only nicotine, according to the state agency investigating the outbreak, the Oregon Health Authority.

-- Fedor Zarkhin

fzarkhin@oregonian.com

desk: 503-294-7674|cell: 971-373-2905|@fedorzarkhin

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