No, not at all.
On the other hand, with the use of electronic cigarettes we've seen that it's easier to control high blood pressure, you reduce the readmission or the exacerbation of COPD, and asthmatic patients have better control. It's been in use for the last 10 years. For these short-term ill effects of the electronic cigarette, it would appear in the literature....
Now for the carcinogenic effects of electronic cigarettes, the concentrations are far lower than in the tobacco cigarettes. We still face the use of carcinogenic substances. We haven't stopped taking X-rays. We haven't stopped all the silica mines because it can cause silicosis.
It's a matter of the dose-response relationship. It is very often forgotten that when you're talking about a risk you have to consider the dose-response relationship.