| Literature DB >> 25429684 |
Stephanie K Kolar1, Brooke G Rogers2, Monica Webb Hooper3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use is increasing in the U.S. Although marketed as a safer alternative for cigarettes, initial evidence suggests that e-cigarettes may pose a secondhand exposure risk. The current study explored the prevalence and correlates of support for e-cigarette bans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25429684 PMCID: PMC4276608 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph111212174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic characteristics and support for indoor home and workplace e-cigarette bans.
| Total | Inside A Home, Smoking E-Cigarettes Should Be | At Workplaces, Smoking E-Cigarettes Should Be | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Never Allowed | Allowed at Some Times or Places | Always Allowed | Never Allowed | Allowed at Some Times or Places | Always Allowed | ||||
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
| Racial/Ethnic group * | 0.25 | 0.17 | |||||||
| White | 30% (77) | 24% (19) | 34% (27) | 42% (33) | 38% (30) | 46% (36) | 16% (13) | ||
| Black or African American | 43% (115) | 18% (21) | 33% (38) | 49% (56) | 29% (33) | 43% (50) | 28% (32) | ||
| Hispanic | 23% (61) | 26% (16) | 43% (26) | 31% (19) | 41% (25) | 33% (20) | 26% (16) | ||
| Other | 4% (10) | 22% (2) | 33% (3) | 45% (4) | 50% (5) | 20% (2) | 30% (3) | ||
| Gender | 0.93 | 0.53 | |||||||
| Female | 60% (160) | 21% (34) | 37% (58) | 42% (67) | 37% (60) | 41% (65) | 22% (35) | ||
| Male | 40% (104) | 23% (24) | 35% (36) | 42% (44) | 32% (33) | 41% (43) | 27% (28) | ||
| Age group | 0.01 | 0.54 | |||||||
| 18 to 30 | 25% (66) | 12% (8) | 44% (29) | 44% (29) | 29% (19) | 39% (26) | 32% (21) | ||
| 31 to 45 | 29% (77) | 26% (20) | 31% (24) | 43% (33) | 38% (29) | 40% (31) | 22% (17) | ||
| 46 to 55 | 29% (76) | 20% (15) | 28% (21) | 52% (40) | 37% (28) | 38% (29) | 25% (19) | ||
| >55 | 17% (46) | 33% (15) | 45% (20) | 22% (10) | 37% (17) | 48% (22) | 15% (7) | ||
| Marital status | 0.02 | 0.37 | |||||||
| Unmarried/Single | 58% (153) | 18% (28) | 43% (65) | 39% (60) | 33% (50) | 44% (67) | 23% (36) | ||
| Married/Living with a partner | 20% (53) | 28% (15) | 17% (9) | 55% (29) | 34% (18) | 34% (18) | 32% (17) | ||
| Separated/Divorced/Widowed | 22% (59) | 26% (15) | 34% (20) | 40% (23) | 42% (25) | 39% (23) | 19% (11) | ||
| Sexual Orientation | 0.55 | 0.29 | |||||||
| Heterosexual | 91% (242) | 22% (53) | 37% (88) | 41% (100) | 34% (82) | 41% (99) | 25% (61) | ||
| Bisexual/Homosexual/Not sure | 9% (23) | 22% (5) | 26% (6) | 52% (12) | 48% (11) | 39% (9) | 13% (3) | ||
| Annual household income | 0.048 | 0.03 | |||||||
| Under $10,000 | 36% (94) | 25% (24) | 31% (29) | 44% (41) | 36% (34) | 32% (30) | 32% (30) | ||
| $10,001–$20,000 | 17% (45) | 16% (7) | 51% (23) | 33% (15) | 38% (17) | 53% (24) | 9% (4) | ||
| $21,001–$40,000 | 27% (69) | 13% (9) | 41% (28) | 46% (31) | 26% (18) | 49% (34) | 25% (17) | ||
| $40,001 or more | 20% (53) | 32% (17) | 26% (14) | 42% (22) | 41% (22) | 36% (19) | 23% (12) | ||
| Education | 0.39 | 0.32 | |||||||
| Less than HS diploma | 21% (54) | 28% (15) | 33% (18) | 39% (21) | 43% (23) | 33% (18) | 24% (13) | ||
| HS diploma/GED | 24% (64) | 14% (9) | 33% (21) | 53% (33) | 31% (20) | 42% (27) | 27% (17) | ||
| Business/Technical training or some college | 36% (96) | 21% (20) | 36% (35) | 43% (41) | 29% (28) | 43% (41) | 28% (27) | ||
| College degree (2-yr/4-yr/graduate) | 19% (51) | 27% (14) | 40% (20) | 33% (17) | 43% (22) | 43% (22) | 14% (7) | ||
| Employment | 0.51 | 0.34 | |||||||
| Employed Full-time | 26% (68) | 26% (18) | 37% (25) | 37% (25) | 37% (25) | 41% (28) | 22% (15) | ||
| Unemployed, looking for work | 12% (32) | 12% (4) | 47% (15) | 41% (13) | 28% (9) | 59% (19) | 13% (4) | ||
| Employed part-time | 32% (85) | 21% (18) | 37% (31) | 42% (35) | 33% (28) | 39% (33) | 28% (24) | ||
| Student/Disabled/Retired/Homemaker | 30% (79) | 23% (18) | 29% (23) | 48% (38) | 38% (30) | 35% (28) | 27% (21) | ||
| Smoking status | 0.07 | 0.049 | |||||||
| Former smoker | 21% (55) | 29% (16) | 42% (23) | 29% (16) | 49% (27) | 33% (18) | 18% (10) | ||
| Current smoker | 79% (210) | 20% (42) | 34% (71) | 46% (96) | 31% (66) | 43% (90) | 26% (54) | ||
* p-value calculated does not include “Other” race. Abbreviations: GED = General Equivalency Diploma; HS = High School; IQR = Interquartile Range.
Support for indoor smoking restrictions for e-cigarettes versus cigarettes.
| Indoor Smoking Restrictions | Cigarettes | E-Cigarettes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| In your opinion, inside a home, smoking should be: | <0.01 | ||
| Never allowed | 63% (167) | 22% (58) | |
| Allowed only at some times/places | 23% (61) | 36% (94) | |
| Always allowed | 14% (36) | 42% (112) | |
| Inside your home (not counting decks, porches, or garages), smoking is: | <0.01 | ||
| Never allowed | 63% (166) | 32% (86) | |
| Allowed only at some times/places | 15% (40) | 23% (61) | |
| Always allowed | 22% (59) | 45% (118) | |
| At workplaces, do you think smoking indoors should be | <0.01 | ||
| Never allowed | 83% (219) | 35% (93) | |
| Allowed only at some times/places | 16% (43) | 41% (108) | |
| Always allowed | 1% (3) | 24% (64) | |
| At your workplace (outside of your home), is smoking in indoor areas * | <0.01 | ||
| Never allowed | 81% (81) | 30% (30) | |
| Allowed only at some times/places | 6% (6) | 6% (6) | |
| Always allowed | 2% (2) | 15% (15) | |
| There is no policy at my work | 8% (8) | 24% (24) | |
| I’m not sure what the policy is | 3% (3) | 25% (25) |
* Among participants who worked outside of the home (n = 100)
Associations between support for indoor e-cigarette bans and risk perceptions.
| Smoking E-Cigarettes Is | Breathing Vapor from Other People’s E-Cigarettes Is | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not Addictive | Somewhat Addictive | Very Addictive | Not Bad for Health | Somewhat Bad | Very Bad for Health | |||
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
| Inside a home smoking e-cigarettes should be | <0.01 | <0.01 | ||||||
| Never allowed | 16% (9) | 19% (29) | 38% (20) | 8% (9) | 23% (28) | 62% (21) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 23% (13) | 44% (68) | 23% (12) | 23% (25) | 51% (62) | 21% (7) | ||
| Always allowed | 61% (35) | 37% (56) | 38% (20) | 68% (73) | 26% (32) | 18% (6) | ||
| At my home smoking e-cigarettes is | <0.01 | <0.01 | ||||||
| Never allowed | 23% (13) | 29% (45) | 52% (27) | 17% (18) | 35% (43) | 74% (25) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 21% (12) | 28% (43) | 12% (6) | 18% (19) | 29% (36) | 18% (61) | ||
| Always allowed | 56% (32) | 43% (66) | 37% (19) | 65% (70) | 36% (44) | 9% (3) | ||
| At workplaces, smoking e-cigarettes should be | <0.01 | <0.01 | ||||||
| Never allowed | 21% (12) | 33% (51) | 56% (29) | 18% (19) | 41% (50) | 71% (24) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 30% (17) | 50% (78) | 25% (13) | 42% (43) | 45% (56) | 18% (6) | ||
| Always allowed | 49% (28) | 16% (25) | 19% (10) | 40% (43) | 14% (17) | 12% (4) | ||
Associations between support for indoor smoking bans, lifetime e-cigarette use, and behavioral intentions.
| Indoor Smoking Restrictions | E-Cigarette Use | Likely to Use E-Cigarettes in Next Year | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Never | Lifetime | Not at all | Somewhat | Very | |||
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
| Inside a home smoking traditional cigarettes should be * | 0.39 | 0.30 | |||||
| Never allowed | 60% (56) | 65% (109) | 70% (54) | 63% (42) | 59% (71) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 22% (21) | 24% (40) | 17% (13) | 27% (18) | 25% (30) | ||
| Always allowed | 18% (17) | 11% (19) | 13% (10) | 10% (7) | 16% (19) | ||
| Inside a home smoking e-cigarettes should be | 0.04 | <0.01 | |||||
| Never allowed | 29% (27) | 17% (29) | 42% (32) | 21% (14) | 10% (12) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 37% (35) | 35% (59) | 39% (30) | 42% (28) | 30% (36) | ||
| Always allowed | 34% (32) | 48% (80) | 19% (15) | 37% (25) | 60% (72) | ||
| At my home smoking cigarettes is | 0.31 | 0.11 | |||||
| Never allowed | 62% (58) | 63% (106) | 74% (57) | 62% (42) | 56% (67) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 12% (11) | 17% (29) | 8% (6) | 16% (11) | 19% (23) | ||
| Always allowed | 27% (25) | 20% (34) | 18% (14) | 22% (15) | 25% (30) | ||
| At my home smoking e-cigarettes is | <0.01 | <0.01 | |||||
| Never allowed | 45% (42) | 25% (42) | 61% (47) | 28% (19) | 17% (20) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 18% (17) | 26% (44) | 16% (12) | 28% (19) | 25% (30) | ||
| Always allowed | 37% (35) | 49% (83) | 23% (18) | 44% (30) | 58% (70) | ||
| At workplaces, smoking cigarettes should be * | 0.24 | 0.40 | |||||
| Never allowed | 86% (81) | 80% (136) | 86% (66) | 85% (58) | 79% (95) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 13% (12) | 18% (31) | 14% (11) | 15% (10) | 18% (22) | ||
| Always allowed | 1% (1) | 1% (2) | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | 3% (3) | ||
| At workplaces, smoking e-cigarettes should be | <0.01 | <0.01 | |||||
| Never allowed | 48% (45) | 27% (46) | 60% (46) | 32% (22) | 21% (25) | ||
| Allowed at some times or places | 35% (33) | 44% (75) | 30% (23) | 46% (31) | 45% (54) | ||
| Always allowed | 17% (16) | 28% (48) | 10% (8) | 22% (15) | 34% (41) | ||
* Cigarettes sometimes allowed and always allowed combined for statistical analysis.