Amanda Lee Hall: Wife’s vaping habit killed her… now her partner is warning others of dangers KossyDerrickBlog KossyDerrickEnt

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Thursday, March 23, 2023

Amanda Lee Hall: Wife’s vaping habit killed her… now her partner is warning others of dangers

Wife’s vaping habit killed her… now her partner is warning others of dangers.

Amanda Lee Hall was a smoker, turning to e-cigarettes in an attempt to kick the bad habit for good, but her lungs eventually “shut down,” resulting in her death in 2021. 

“We lost the heart of our family and it’s a loss that we will never recover from,” Hensley told NeedToKnow.Online. “Since losing her, life has been miserable and I feel adrift – every day is a struggle just to function and her absence is felt to the core.”

When she and her wife Kristen Hensley wed in 2014, the pair were unaware of what tragedies were ahead. Hall, 44, had begun smoking cigarettes at 14 until breaking the 22-year habit by turning to vapes in 2013, assuming it was healthier than traditional cigarettes. But when she began vomiting and experiencing severe weight loss – dropping nearly 60 pounds in just five months – she knew something was wrong.


Amanda Hall and Kristen Hensley in a selfie. The 44-year-old would use the device so often that her wife Kristen Hensley would say there was a 'fruity cloud' wherever she went.

In autumn 2019, less than five years after she started vaping, the warehouse worker became unwell.

She struggled to breathe and was put in a coma but a year and a half later, Amanda was dead.

She said: "It's killing people. I have had several people say they thought the warnings about vaping were simply propaganda from the tobacco companies to get people to start smoking again. This is not true."

The NHS suggests people who smoke try vaping in order to cut down on their smoking habit.

A review previously conducted by Public Health England found that the devices are 95 per cent less harmful than tobacco products.

He said that while 'vaping has an important role in helping smokers who are addicted to come off smoking', it shouldn't be marketed to children.

And various studies have found health risks associated with the products, including a risk of miscarriage, depression and lung damage,

Kristen revealed that her wife had first started smoking when she was 14, and continued for the next 22 years.

The most she smoked was ten cigarettes a day.

She finally chose to stub it out and switch to vapes after her father, a lifelong smoker, was diagnosed with a terminal lung condition.

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