| Literature DB >> 27153077 |
Jieming Zhong1, Shuangshuang Cao2, Weiwei Gong3, Fangrong Fei4, Meng Wang5.
Abstract
Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) use is becoming increasingly common, especially among adolescents and young adults, and there is little evidence on the impact of e-cigarettes use on never-smokers. With a meta-analysis method, we explore the association between e-cigarettes use and smoking intention that predicts future cigarette smoking. Studies were identified by searching three databases up to January 2016. The meta-analysis results were presented as pooled odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) calculated by a fixed-effects model. A total of six studies (91,051 participants, including 1452 with ever e-cigarettes use) were included in this meta-analysis study. We found that never-smoking adolescents and young adults who used e-cigarettes have more than 2 times increased odds of intention to cigarette smoking (OR = 2.21, 95% CI: 1.86-2.61) compared to those who never used, with low evidence of between-study heterogeneity (p = 0.28, I² = 20.1%). Among never-smoking adolescents and young adults, e-cigarettes use was associated with increased smoking intention.Entities:
Keywords: electronic cigarette; meta-analysis; smoking intention
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27153077 PMCID: PMC4881090 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13050465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Information of the studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Study (year) | Source | Participants (No. of Ever e-Cigarettes Users/Participants) | Location | Design | Measures | Variables Adjusted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bunnell RE, | 2011–2013 National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS) | Students in grades 6–12 (541/43,873) | USA | Cross-sectional | Sex, race/ethnicity, school level, number of distinct sources of pro-tobacco advertisement exposure, presence of a tobacco user in the household, and survey year | |
| Smoking intentions: “Do you think you will smoke a cigarette in the next year?” and “If one of your best friends were to offer you a cigarette, would you smoke it?” Response options included: “definitely yes”, “probably yes”, “probably not”, and “definitely not”. Those who responded “definitely not” to both intentions questions were classified as not having intentions; otherwise, respondents were classified as having intentions. | ||||||
| Coleman BN, | 2012–2013 National Adult Tobacco Survey (NATS) | Young adults aged 18–29 years (341/4310) | USA | Cross-sectional | Sex, age group, race/ethnicity, educational attainment, US Census region, ever use of smokeless tobacco, ever use of hookah, ever use of cigars, and ever experimentation with cigarettes | |
| Openness to smoking: “Do you think you will smoke a cigarette soon?” and “Do you think you will smoke a cigarette in the next year?” Response options were: “Definitely yes”, “Probably yes”, “Probably not”, and “Definitely not”. A binary composite variable was created, and those who responded with any response option other than a firm intention not to smoke (“Definitely not”) were categorized as being open to smoking cigarettes and, therefore, considered at risk for future smoking. | ||||||
| Wang MP, | 2012–2013 Youth Smoking Survey | Secondary 1 to 6 students with mean age of 14.6 years (59/38,398) | Hong Kong | Cross-sectional | Sex, age, perceived family affluence, peer smoking, parental smoking, and school clustering effect | |
| Smoking intentions: Students reported whether they would smoke in the next 12 months, and when cigarettes were offered by one of their good friends in two separate items each with four response options of “definitely not”, “probably not”, “probably yes”, and “definitely yes”. Those who chose “definitely not” for both questions were regarded as having no intention to smoke and otherwise as having an intention to smoke. | ||||||
| Moore GF, | 2014 Child exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke (CHETS) Wales 2 | 10–11 year-old children (77/1467) | Wales | Cross-sectional | Parents smoke/use e-cigarettes, friends smoking, sex, family affluence Scale (FAS) | |
| Smoking intentions: Future intentions were measured by the question ‘Do you think you will smoke in 2 years’ time?’, with response options of ‘definitely yes’, ‘probably yes’, ‘maybe or maybe not’, ‘probably no’, and ‘definitely no’. | ||||||
| Wills TA, | Survey at four public and two private high schools | High school students with mean age of 14.7 years (418/2309) | Hawaii | Cross-sectional | Gender, ethnicity, family structure, parental education, parental support, parental monitoring, parent-adolescent conflict, academic competence, social competence, sensation seeking, rebelliousness, smoking expectancies, prototypes of smokers, peer smoker affiliation | |
| Willingness to smoking: “Suppose you were with a group of friends and there were some cigarettes you could have if you wanted. How willing would you be to ___:” The items were “Take one puff”, “Smoke a whole cigarette”, and “Take some cigarettes to try later”. Responses were on four-point scales with response points: Not At All Willing (0); A Little Willing (1); Somewhat Willing (2); and Very Willing (3). A composite score for willingness to smoke was the sum of the three items (α = 0.91). | ||||||
| Primack BA, | Second and third waves of the United States-based Dartmouth Media, Advertising, and Health Study | Adolescents and young adults aged 16–26 years (16/694) | USA | Longitudinal cohort | Sex, age, race/ethnicity, maternal education level, sensation-seeking tendency, parental smoking, close friends smoking | |
| Smoking intentions: “If one of your friends offered you a cigarette, |
Figure 1Selection of studies for inclusion in meta-analysis.
Figure 2Effect of e-cigarettes use on smoking intention among never-smoking adolescents and young adults. OR refers to odds ratio; CI refers to confidence interval.