PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NE-WHERE Electronic Cigarettes Now Available at 7-Eleven Stores

NE-WHERE's top quality electronic cigarettes are now available at participating 7-Eleven stores throughout California.

NE-WHERE Electronic Cigarettes Now Available at 7-Eleven Stores
2013-02-14
TARZANA, CA, February 14, 2013 (Press-News.org) According to a spokesperson for NE-WHERE, the company's popular selling brand of electronic cigarettes are now available for purchase at local participating 7-Eleven stores. The well-established convenience store chain long known for its Big Gulp, will now also offer smokers this increasingly attractive alternative to traditional "tobacco" cigarettes.

This is definitely a coup for the high quality electronic cigarette maker with innovative packaging, which is now being sold at gas stations and drugstores across the western United States. All three popular flavors of NE-WHERE e-cigs will be offered at the convenience store, including Classic Tobacco, Refreshing Menthol, and the peach flavored Premium Blend. With 7-Eleven as a part of its distribution network, NE-WHERE e-cigs are sure to take yet another step towards being the go-to source for e-cig users. Those who want the cigarette experience without the restrictions of smoking bans across the nation finally have a clear cut choice.

What Are Electronic Cigarettes?

Electronic cigarettes, or e-cigs as they are abbreviated, are a smokeless alternative to nicotine that allows smokers to enjoy all the aspects of smoking that they are accustomed to with fewer of the health and social drawbacks of traditional smoking methods.

E-cigs are, first of all, smokeless. They do not burn tobacco and create secondhand smoke that is harmful to others. Instead e-cigarettes use a liquid mix that is vaporized, creating an inhalable mist. This eliminates any levels of tar and other substances that traditional cigarette smokers inhale.

This added safety factor is what makes electronic cigarettes more portable as well. From the break room to the college campus, these smokeless cigarettes can be used without creating harmful secondhand smoke or leaving behind the unpleasant, telltale odors of cigarette smoke--odors that cling to clothes and linger in rooms. In fact, you do not even need an ashtray for electronic cigarettes. When finished smoking NE-WHERE for approximately the equivalent of two and a half packs of traditional cigarettes you simply throw it away and purchase another. In an effort to be more environmentally conscious, NE-WHERE also implemented a recycle program in which consumers can send the company five used NE-WHERE cigarettes, which the company will then recycle in exchange for a brand new NE-WHERE e-cig in the flavor of their choice.

Why Are People Smoking Electronic Cigarettes By NE-WHERE?

Many people look to different kinds of nicotine intake when they can't get their daily fix with traditional cigarettes. Nicotine gum and patches are popular choices but many users find them to not be comparable to the experience of actually smoking a cigarette.

The reason for this is that adding a patch or chewing gum just does not offer the same benefits that smoking does. Part of the habit of smoking is the actual tactile feeling of the cigarette between the fingers and the inhaling of the nicotine. Electronic cigarettes are as close as smokers can come to the traditional smoking experience without the social and health concerns that smoking entails.

For the reasons mentioned above, electronic cigarettes are becoming an increasingly acceptable choice for smokers who want the pleasure and convenience of doing what they enjoy when they enjoy it--no matter what time it is. In that way, NE-WHERE electronic cigarettes are perfectly suited to 7-Eleven. Both are there for you whenever and wherever you need them.

To find out more about NEwhere's electronic cigarettes, please visit www.NEwhere.com

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
NE-WHERE Electronic Cigarettes Now Available at 7-Eleven Stores NE-WHERE Electronic Cigarettes Now Available at 7-Eleven Stores 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Platelet-rich plasma treatment shows potential for knee osteoarthritis

2013-02-13
A study by researchers from Hospital for Special Surgery has shown that platelet-rich plasma (PRP) holds great promise for treating patients with knee osteoarthritis. The treatment improved pain and function, and in up to 73% of patients, appeared to delay the progression of osteoarthritis, which is a progressive disease. The study appears online, ahead of print, in the Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine. "This is a very positive study," said Brian Halpern, M.D., chief of the Primary Care Sports Medicine Service at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City, and lead ...

Detecting cocaine 'naturally'

Detecting cocaine naturally
2013-02-13
This press release is available in French. Montréal, February 13, 2013 – Since the beginning of time, living organisms have developed ingenious mechanisms to monitor their environment. As part of an international study, a team of researchers has adapted some of these natural mechanisms to detect specific molecules such as cocaine more accurately and quickly. Their work may greatly facilitate the rapid screening—less than five minutes—of many drugs, infectious diseases, and cancers. Professor Alexis Vallée-Bélisle of the University of Montreal Department of Chemistry ...

UTHealth: Alcohol consumption may be in response to smoking cessation

2013-02-13
HOUSTON – (Feb.12, 2013) – New findings by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) School of Public Health may help identify situations in which smokers who are trying to quit are at a higher risk of relapse. More than 1,200 people die in the United States every day from smoking-related illnesses. This is equivalent to three airplanes loaded with passengers crashing everyday in America. Smoking-related illnesses are the No. 1 cause of preventable deaths in the country, killing more Americans than drugs, homicides, suicides, ...

UCSB study of cocaine addiction reveals targets for treatment

2013-02-13
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Scientists at UC Santa Barbara are researching cocaine addiction, part of a widespread problem, which, along with other addictions, costs billions of dollars in damage to individuals, families, and society. Laboratory studies at UCSB have revealed that the diminished brain function and learning impairment that result from cocaine addiction can be treated –– and that learning can be restored. Karen Szumlinski, a professor in the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at UCSB, and her colleagues Osnat Ben-Shahar and Tod Kippin, have worked ...

Emerging cancer drugs may drive bone tumors

Emerging cancer drugs may drive bone tumors
2013-02-13
Cancer drugs should kill tumors, not encourage their spread. But new evidence suggests that an otherwise promising class of drugs may actually increase the risk of tumors spreading to bone, according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The drugs, IAP antagonists, block survival signals that many cancer cells rely on to stay alive. Working in mice, the investigators found that targeting the same protein that makes tumors vulnerable to death also overactivates cells called osteoclasts, which are responsible for tearing down bone. "These ...

Flu outbreaks modeled by new study of classroom schedules

Flu outbreaks modeled by new study of classroom schedules
2013-02-13
Classroom rosters combined with human-networking theory may give a clearer picture of just how infectious diseases such as influenza can spread through a closed group of people, and even through populations at large. Using high-school schedule data for a community of students, teachers, and staff, Penn State University's Marcel Salathé, an assistant professor of biology, and Timo Smieszek, a post-doctoral researcher, have developed a low-cost but effective method to determine how to focus disease-control strategies based on which individuals are most likely to spread the ...

Does race make a difference in monitoring of opioid pain therapy?

2013-02-13
Philadelphia, PA, February 12, 2013 – Opioids are frequently prescribed for pain management in noncancer patients, but recommended clinical guidelines for monitoring effectiveness and signs of drug abuse are often not implemented. Alongside well-documented racial disparities in prescribing opioid medications for pain, researchers report racial differences in the use of recommended opioid monitoring and follow-up treatment practices. The study is published in the current issue of PAIN®. "In our study, we examined whether racial disparities exist in a more comprehensive ...

Ice age extinction shaped Australian plant diversity

Ice age extinction shaped Australian plant diversity
2013-02-13
Researchers have shown that part of Australia's rich plant diversity was wiped out by the ice ages, proving that extinction, instead of evolution, influences biodiversity. The research led by the University of Melbourne and University of Tasmania has shown that plant diversity in South East Australia was as rich as some of the most diverse places in the world, and that most of these species went extinct during the ice ages, probably about one million years ago. The team's work was published in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Dr ...

Flood research shows human habits die hard

2013-02-13
New research has come up with ways to quickly assess flood damage to houses while also showing most people didn't intend to make changes to reduce their vulnerability after the 2010-11 floods in Australia. Two separate reports from the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility released today show how lessons learned from households affected by the 2010-11 Australian floods can minimise damage under current and future climates. The report Analysis of Damage to Buildings Following the 2010 Eastern Australia Floods evaluated the role of development controls ...

Blackbirds in the spotlight

2013-02-13
This press release is available in German. Street lamps, traffic lights and lighting from homes are causing a rise in our night-time light levels. For some time now, scientists have suspected that artificial light in our towns and cities at night could affect plants, animals and us, humans, too. Studies, however, that have tested this influence directly are few. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Radolfzell, Germany, recently investigated how light conditions in urban areas at night affect European blackbirds (Turdus merula). They found that animals ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Low-dose ketamine shows promise for pain relief in emergency department patients

Lifestyle & risk factor changes improved AFib symptoms, not burden, over standard care

Researchers discover new cognitive blueprint for making and breaking habits

In a small international trial, novel oral medication muvalaplin lowered Lp(a)

Eradivir’s EV25 therapeutic proven to reduce advanced-stage influenza viral loads faster, more thoroughly in preclinical studies than current therapies

Most Medicare beneficiaries do not compare prescription drug plans – and may be sticking with bad plans

“What Would They Say?” video wins second place in international award for tobacco control advocacy

Black Britons from top backgrounds up to three times more likely to be downwardly mobile

Developing an antibody to combat age-related muscle atrophy

Brain aging and Alzheimer's: Insights from non-human primates

Can cells ‘learn’ like brains?

How cells get used to the familiar

Seemingly “broken” genes in coronaviruses may be essential for viral survival

Improving hurricane modeling with physics-informed machine learning

Seed slippage: Champati cha-cha

Hospitalization following outpatient diagnosis of RSV in adults

Beyond backlash: how feeling threatened by diversity can trigger positive change

Climate change exposure associated with increased emergency imaging

Incorrect AI advice influences diagnostic decisions

Building roots in glass, a bio-inspired approach to creating 3D microvascular networks using plants and fungi

Spinning fusion fuel for efficiency

The American Pediatric Society names Dr. Beth Tarini as the recipient of the 2025 Norman J. Siegel New Member Outstanding Science Award

New Clinical Study Confirms the Anti-Obesity Effects of Kimchi

Highly selective pathway for propyne semihydrogenation achieved via CoSb intermetallic catalyst

GERD linked to cardiovascular risk factors: New insights from Mendelian randomization study

Content moderators are influenced by online misinformation

Adulting, nerdiness and the importance of single-panel comics

Study helps explain how children learned for 99% of human history

The impact of misinformation on Spanish-language social media platforms

Populations overheat as major cities fail canopy goals: new research

[Press-News.org] NE-WHERE Electronic Cigarettes Now Available at 7-Eleven Stores
NE-WHERE's top quality electronic cigarettes are now available at participating 7-Eleven stores throughout California.