Literature DB >> 29626778

A longitudinal study of risk perceptions and e-cigarette initiation among college students: Interactions with smoking status.

Maria Cooper1, Alexandra Loukas2, Kathleen R Case3, C Nathan Marti4, Cheryl L Perry5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent data suggest that lower perceived risks of e-cigarettes are associated with e-cigarette use in young adults; however, the temporality of this relationship is not well-understood. We explore how perceptions of harmfulness and addictiveness of e-cigarettes influence e-cigarette initiation, and specifically whether this association varies by cigarette smoking status, in a longitudinal study of tobacco use on college campuses.
METHODS: Data are from a 5-wave 24-college study in Texas. Only students who reported never using e-cigarettes at wave 1 were included (n = 2565). Multilevel discrete-time hazard models, accounting for school clustering, were used. The dependent variable, ever e-cigarette use, was assessed at each wave. Both time-varying (e-cigarette perceptions of harmfulness and addictiveness, age, use of cigarettes, use of other tobacco products, and use of other substances) and time-invariant demographic covariates were included. Two-way interactions between each e-cigarette perception variable and current conventional cigarette use were tested to determine if the hypothesized relationship differed among smokers and non-smokers.
RESULTS: 21% of all never e-cigarette users at baseline had initiated e-cigarette ever use by wave 5. Significant two-way interactions qualified the relationship between risk perceptions and e-cigarette initiation. Specifically, perceptions of a lower degree of harmfulness (OR = 1.13, p = .047) and addictiveness (OR = 1.34, p < .001) of e-cigarettes predicted initiation among non-smokers, but not among current smokers.
CONCLUSION: Perceiving a lower degree of risk of e-cigarettes contributes to subsequent e-cigarette initiation among non-smokers, but not among current smokers.
FINDINGS: have implications for prevention campaigns focusing on the potential harm of e-cigarettes for non-smoking college students.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cigarette smoking; College students; Electronic cigarettes; Risk perceptions; Tobacco use

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29626778      PMCID: PMC5911205          DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.11.027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend        ISSN: 0376-8716            Impact factor:   4.492


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3.  Susceptibility to tobacco product use among youth in wave 1 of the population Assessment of tobacco and health (PATH) study.

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Authors: 
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10.  LGB Tobacco Control: Do Health Belief Model Constructs Predict Tobacco Use Intentions Differently between LGB and Heterosexual Individuals?

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