Erin L Mead1, Sarah Lindstrom Johnson2, Junaed Siddiqui3, James Butler4, Thomas Kirchner5, Robert H Feldman6. 1. School of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT 06030, US, Tel: (860) 679-2456, mead@uchc.edu. 2. T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, Tempe, AZ 85287, US. Tel: (480) 965-9975, sarahlj@asu.edu. 3. Department of Behavioral and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, 4200 Valley Drive, College Park, MD 20742, US, junaed1@umd.edu. 4. Department of Behavioral and Community Health, Maryland Center for Healthy Equity, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, 4200 Valley Drive, College Park, MD 20742, US, Tel: (301) 405-0757, jbutler9@umd.edu. 5. College of Global Public Health, New York University, 41 E. 11st Street, New York, NY 10003, US, Tel: (646) 997-0548, tom.kirchner@nyu.edu. 6. Department of Behavioral and Community Health, Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, 4200 Valley Drive, College Park, MD 20742, US, rfeldman@umd.edu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African American young adults are at high risk for dual use of cigarettes and cigars. Limited work has explored and characterized the reasons for use in this population and their relative importance for initiation and current smoking of these products. METHOD: Reasons for cigarette and cigar use were systematically explored and categorized using a mixed methods participatory approach called concept mapping. A series of in-person group sessions were held with 30 African American young adult (ages 18-29) current smokers of both cigarettes and cigars in Prince George's County, MD and Washington, DC. Participants brainstormed, sorted, rated, and interpreted their reasons for initiation and past 30-day use of cigarettes and cigars. A cluster map was generated using multi-dimensional scaling, and t-tests were used to explore differences in ratings by background characteristics. RESULTS: Participants generated 64 reasons for smoking cigarettes and cigars, and categorized these reasons into six groups: emotions, urges, access, product characteristics, lifestyle, and outside pressure. Emotions and urges were the most important motivations for initiation and current smoking of both products. Product characteristics were significantly more important for cigar initiation and smoking than for cigarettes, and outside pressure was more important for current smoking of cigars than cigarettes. Ratings differed by gender, socioeconomic status, and smoking characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette and cigar smoking have several overlapping motivations, but key differences were also found, most notably for product characteristics. The FDA's regulation of cigars and cigarettes should focus on addressing key characteristics appealing to young adults to curb dual use.
BACKGROUND: African American young adults are at high risk for dual use of cigarettes and cigars. Limited work has explored and characterized the reasons for use in this population and their relative importance for initiation and current smoking of these products. METHOD: Reasons for cigarette and cigar use were systematically explored and categorized using a mixed methods participatory approach called concept mapping. A series of in-person group sessions were held with 30 African American young adult (ages 18-29) current smokers of both cigarettes and cigars in Prince George's County, MD and Washington, DC. Participants brainstormed, sorted, rated, and interpreted their reasons for initiation and past 30-day use of cigarettes and cigars. A cluster map was generated using multi-dimensional scaling, and t-tests were used to explore differences in ratings by background characteristics. RESULTS: Participants generated 64 reasons for smoking cigarettes and cigars, and categorized these reasons into six groups: emotions, urges, access, product characteristics, lifestyle, and outside pressure. Emotions and urges were the most important motivations for initiation and current smoking of both products. Product characteristics were significantly more important for cigar initiation and smoking than for cigarettes, and outside pressure was more important for current smoking of cigars than cigarettes. Ratings differed by gender, socioeconomic status, and smoking characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette and cigar smoking have several overlapping motivations, but key differences were also found, most notably for product characteristics. The FDA's regulation of cigars and cigarettes should focus on addressing key characteristics appealing to young adults to curb dual use.
Entities:
Keywords:
cigars; concept mapping; dual use; reasons for use; smoking; young adults
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