| Literature DB >> 31805035 |
Teresa W Wang1, Andrea S Gentzke1, MeLisa R Creamer1, Karen A Cullen2, Enver Holder-Hayes2, Michael D Sawdey2, Gabriella M Anic2, David B Portnoy2, Sean Hu1, David M Homa1, Ahmed Jamal1, Linda J Neff1.
Abstract
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable disease, disability, and death in the United States. Most tobacco product use begins during adolescence. In recent years, tobacco products have evolved to include various smoked, smokeless, and electronic products. PERIOD COVERED: 2019. DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM: The National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS) is an annual, cross-sectional, school-based, self-administered survey of U.S. middle school (grades 6-8) and high school (grades 9-12) students. A three-stage cluster sampling procedure is used to generate a nationally representative sample of U.S. students attending public and private schools. NYTS is the only nationally representative survey of U.S. middle and high school students that focuses exclusively on tobacco use patterns and associated factors. NYTS is designed to provide national data on tobacco product use and has been conducted periodically during 1999-2009 and annually since 2011. Data from NYTS are used to support the design, implementation, and evaluation of comprehensive tobacco use prevention and control programs and to inform tobacco regulatory activities. Since its inception in 1999 through 2018, NYTS had been conducted via paper and pencil questionnaires. In 2019, NYTS for the first time was administered in schools using electronic data collection methods. CDC's Office on Smoking and Health, in collaboration with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) Center for Tobacco Products, analyzed data from the 2019 NYTS to assess tobacco product use patterns and associated factors among U.S. middle and high school students. Overall, 19,018 questionnaires were completed and weighted to represent approximately 27.0 million students. On the basis of self-reported grade level, this included 8,837 middle school questionnaires (11.9 million students) and 10,097 high school questionnaires (15.0 million students); 84 questionnaires with missing information on grade level were excluded from school-level analyses.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31805035 PMCID: PMC6903396 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.ss6812a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Surveill Summ ISSN: 1545-8636
Percentage of middle and high school students who reported ever using tobacco products, by product,* school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Tobacco product | Sex | Race/Ethnicity | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | White, non-Hispanic | Black, non-Hispanic | Hispanic† | Other, non-Hispanic | |||
| % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | Estimated weighted no.§ | |
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| E-cigarettes | 34.5 (32.1–36.9) | 35.7 (32.9–38.5) | 38.2 (35.7–40.8) | 27.0 (24.1–30.1) | 35.4 (32.6–38.3) | 24.4 (20.2–29.1) |
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| Cigarettes | 14.2 (12.6–15.9) | 18.3 (15.2–22.0) | 18.4 (15.8–21.3) | 11.8 (9.5–14.4) | 15.8 (13.2–18.8) | 9.6 (7.1–12.9) |
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| Cigars | 11.8 (10.4–13.3) | 16.9 (14.0–20.2) | 14.9 (12.8–17.2) | 17.9 (15.2–21.1) | 13.3 (11.0–16.1) | 7.2 (5.2–9.9) |
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| Smokeless tobacco | 5.1 (4.1–6.4) | 13.1 (10.5–16.2) | 11.8 (9.5–14.6) | 4.6 (3.4–6.3) | 6.8 (5.3–8.5) | 5.7 (4.1–8.0) |
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| Hookahs | 6.9 (5.8–8.2) | 7.3 (5.4–9.9) | 5.8 (4.5–7.3) | 10.1 (7.5–13.4) | 8.7 (6.8–10.9) | 6.2 (4.6–8.4) |
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| Pipe tobacco | 1.8 (1.4–2.1) | 3.8 (2.5–5.8) | 3.2 (2.2–4.6) | —¶ | 2.5 (1.8–3.4) | — |
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| Any tobacco product** | 39.6 (37.1–42.3) | 41.5 (38.4–44.6) | 42.4 (39.5–45.4) | 38.4 (34.3–42.7) | 40.8 (37.8–43.9) | 29.3 (25.0–33.9) |
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| Any combustible tobacco product†† | 21.7 (19.8–23.8) | 25.6 (22.3–29.1) | 23.7 (21.1–26.6) | 27.1 (23.2–31.4) | 24.0 (21.3–27.0) | 15.7 (12.5–19.7) |
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| Two or more tobacco products§§ | 19.2 (17.4–21.1) | 24.2 (21.0–27.9) | 23.1 (20.4–26.0) | 20.7 (17.8–24.0) | 21.7 (19.1–24.6) | 13.0 (10.3–16.2) |
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| E-cigarettes | 46.2 (43.4–49.1) | 47.7 (43.8–51.7) | 52.2 (49.4–54.9) | 33.8 (29.8–38.0) | 44.9 (41.1–48.8) | 33.4 (27.5–39.9) |
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| Cigarettes | 19.2 (16.7–21.9) | 25.7 (20.7–31.3) | 25.9 (22.2–30.0) | 14.5 (11.2–18.6) | 21.1 (17.0–25.8) | 12.8 (8.6–18.6) |
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| Cigars | 16.8 (14.9–18.8) | 24.5 (20.1–29.4) | 22.0 (18.9–25.5) | 24.6 (21.5–27.8) | 17.9 (14.4–22.0) | 10.0 (6.9–14.2) |
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| Smokeless tobacco | 6.6 (4.9–8.8) | 17.8 (14.0–22.2) | 16.2 (12.9–20.1) | 5.7 (3.8–8.5) | 8.1 (6.1–10.7) | 7.9 (5.5–11.1) |
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| Hookahs | 9.4 (7.7–11.4) | 10.4 (7.7–14.8) | 8.1 (6.0–10.8) | 14.8 (11.3–19.2) | 11.8 (9.0–15.3) | 8.5 (6.1–11.8) |
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| Pipe tobacco | 2.0 (1.6–2.6) | 5.5 (3.4–8.8) | 4.5 (3.0–6.8) | — | 2.9 (1.9–4.6) | — |
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| Any tobacco product | 52.4 (49.5–55.2) | 54.2 (50.1–58.2) | 56.9 (53.7–60.1) | 47.6 (43.1–52.1) | 51.0 (47.2–54.8) | 38.9 (32.9–45.2) |
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| Any combustible tobacco product | 28.9 (26.2–31.7) | 35.0 (30.2–40.1) | 32.9 (29.2–36.8) | 35.3 (31.1–39.7) | 30.9 (27.0–35.2) | 20.5 (15.3–26.8) |
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| Two or more tobacco products | 25.9 (23.5–28.5) | 33.6 (28.7–38.8) | 32.2 (28.6–36.1) | 27.5 (24.0–31.3) | 28.3 (24.4–32.5) | 17.3 (13.0–22.7) |
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| E-cigarettes | 19.9 (18.1–21.8) | 19.9 (17.9–22.1) | 19.3 (17.3–21.4) | 18.4 (15.5–21.8) | 23.9 (21.6–26.4) | 12.6 (9.4–16.8) |
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| Cigarettes | 8.0 (6.6–9.7) | 8.7 (7.5–10.0) | 8.2 (6.7–9.9) | 8.4 (6.3–11.0) | 9.2 (7.6–11.1) | — |
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| Cigars | 5.5 (4.3–7.2) | 7.0 (5.9–8.3) | 5.1 (4.2–6.3) | 9.6 (6.8–13.7) | 7.7 (6.3–9.3) | — |
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| Smokeless tobacco | 3.1 (2.3–4.3) | 6.9 (5.6–8.4) | 5.9 (4.5–7.7) | — | 5.0 (3.9–6.5) | — |
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| Hookahs | 3.8 (3.0–4.8) | 3.3 (2.6–4.2) | 2.7 (2.0–3.6) | 4.2 (2.9–5.9) | 4.9 (3.7–6.5) | — |
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| Pipe tobacco | 1.4 (1.1–1.8) | 1.7 (1.3–2.2) | 1.4 (1.0–2.0) | — | — | — |
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| Any tobacco product | 23.8 (21.5–26.2) | 24.8 (22.5–27.2) | 22.7 (20.4–25.3) | 26.9 (22.8–31.5) | 28.3 (25.7–31.0) | 16.3 (12.4–21.2) |
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| Any combustible tobacco product | 12.8 (11.1–14.8) | 13.2 (11.5–15.0) | 11.2 (9.7–13.0) | 16.8 (12.9–21.6) | 15.5 (13.4–17.8) | 9.3 (6.2–13.8) |
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| Two or more tobacco products | 10.9 (9.3–12.7) | 12.0 (10.5–13.7) | 10.6 (8.9–12.6) | 12.2 (9.6–15.2) | 13.8 (11.9–15.9) | — |
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Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Ever use of e-cigarettes was determined by asking, “Have you ever used an e-cigarette, even once or twice?” Ever use of cigarettes was determined by asking, “Have you ever tried cigarette smoking, even one or two puffs?” Ever use of cigars was determined by asking, “Have you ever tried smoking cigars, cigarillos, or little cigars, such as Swisher Sweets, Black and Mild, Garcia y Vega, Cheyenne, White Owl, or Dutch Masters, even one or two puffs?” Smokeless tobacco was defined as use of chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products. Ever use of smokeless tobacco was determined by asking the following question for use of chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip: “Have you ever used chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip, such as Copenhagen, Grizzly, Skoal, or Longhorn, even just a small amount?” and the following question for use of snus and dissolvable tobacco products: “Which of the following tobacco products have you ever tried, even just one time?” Responses from these questions were combined to derive overall smokeless tobacco use. Ever use of hookahs was determined by asking, “Have you ever tried smoking tobacco in a hookah or water pipe, even one or two puffs?” Ever use of pipe tobacco (not hookahs) was determined by asking, “Which of the following tobacco products have you ever tried, even just one time?” Because of missing data on the ever use questions, denominators for each tobacco product might be different.
† Hispanic persons could be of any race.
§ Estimated weighted total number of ever tobacco product users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons. Overall estimates were reported among 19,018 U.S. middle and high school students. School level was determined by self-reported grade level: high school (grades 9–12; n = 10,097) and middle school (grades 6–8; n = 8,837). Overall estimates might not directly total to sums of corresponding subgroup estimates because of rounding or inclusion of students who did not self-report sex, race/ethnicity, or grade level.
¶ Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
** Any tobacco product use was defined as ever use of any tobacco product (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis [small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf]), even just one time.
†† Any combustible tobacco product use was defined as ever use of cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis.
§§ Defined as ever use of two or more tobacco products (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis).
Percentage of middle and high school students who reported current (past 30-day) tobacco product use, by product, school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Tobacco product | Sex | Race/Ethnicity | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | White, non-Hispanic | Black, non-Hispanic | Hispanic† | Other, non-Hispanic | |||
| % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | Estimated weighted no.§ | |
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| E-cigarettes | 20.0 (18.3–21.8) | 20.1 (18.5–21.9) | 23.1 (21.1–25.1) | 13.6 (11.5–16.1) | 18.7 (16.9–20.7) | 13.6 (10.9–16.9) |
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| Cigars | 4.3 (3.7–5.1) | 6.3 (5.4–7.2) | 5.1 (4.3–6.1) | 8.6 (7.0–10.6) | 4.8 (3.9–5.9) | —¶ |
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| Cigarettes | 3.4 (2.7–4.1) | 5.1 (4.0–6.4) | 5.0 (3.9–6.4) | 3.1 (2.3–4.1) | 3.6 (2.8–4.5) | — |
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| Smokeless tobacco | 1.4 (1.0–1.9) | 5.5 (4.4–6.9) | 4.5 (3.4–6.0) | — | 2.4 (1.9–3.0) | — |
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| Hookahs | 2.6 (2.1–3.2) | 2.6 (2.0–3.3) | 1.9 (1.4–2.5) | 4.5 (3.3–6.1) | 3.3 (2.5–4.4) | — |
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| Pipe tobacco | — | 1.1 (0.8–1.6) | 0.9 (0.6–1.4) | — | — | — |
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| Any tobacco product** | 22.5 (20.8–24.3) | 23.5 (21.6–25.4) | 25.3 (23.2–27.6) | 19.6 (17.0–22.4) | 22.0 (20.1–24.0) | 15.3 (12.3–18.9) |
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| Any combustible tobacco product†† | 7.8 (6.9–8.8) | 9.8 (8.5–11.2) | 8.5 (7.2–10.0) | 12.0 (10.1–14.3) | 8.8 (7.7–9.9) | 5.5 (3.9–7.8) |
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| Two or more tobacco products§§ | 6.1 (5.4–6.9) | 9.4 (8.2–10.9) | 8.5 (7.2–10.1) | 8.2 (6.6–10.0) | 6.9 (6.1–7.8) | 5.0 (3.7–6.7) |
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| E-cigarettes | 27.4 (25.0–29.9) | 27.6 (25.1–30.3) | 32.4 (29.8–35.2) | 17.7 (14.5–21.4) | 23.2 (20.6–26.0) | 18.6 (14.6–23.3) |
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| Cigars | 6.2 (5.2–7.3) | 9.0 (7.7–10.5) | 7.6 (6.2–9.3) | 12.3 (10.2–14.7) | 6.2 (5.0–7.6) | — |
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| Cigarettes | 4.1 (3.1–5.4) | 7.3 (5.7–9.4) | 7.1 (5.4–9.2) | — | 3.8 (2.9–5.0) | — |
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| Smokeless tobacco | 1.8 (1.2–2.7) | 7.5 (5.8–9.8) | 6.5 (4.8–8.8) | — | 2.6 (2.0–3.5) | — |
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| Hookahs | 3.2 (2.5–4.1) | 3.6 (2.7–4.6) | 2.5 (1.8–3.3) | 6.4 (4.7–8.7) | 4.0 (3.0– 5.5) | — |
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| Pipe tobacco | –– | 1.5 (1.0–2.3) | 1.3 (0.8–2.0) | — | — | — |
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| Any tobacco product | 30.6 (28.4–33.0) | 31.8 (29.1–34.6) | 35.6 (32.7–38.6) | 25.4 (22.2–28.9) | 26.6 (24.1–29.2) | 20.7 (16.4–25.7) |
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| Any combustible tobacco product | 10.2 (8.8–11.7) | 13.6 (11.7–15.8) | 11.9 (10.0–14.2) | 16.8 (14.4–19.5) | 10.3 (8.9–11.9) | 7.3 (4.8–11.0) |
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| Two or more tobacco products | 8.0 (6.9–9.3) | 13.4 (11.4–15.6) | 12.0 (10.0–14.4) | 11.5 (9.4–14.1) | 8.5 (7.3–9.8) | — |
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| E-cigarettes | 10.8 (9.4–12.4) | 10.2 (8.8–11.9) | 10.3 (8.8–12.0) | 8.6 (6.6–11.1) | 13.1 (11.2–15.3) | — |
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| Cigars | 2.0 (1.4–2.8) | 2.7 (2.1–3.4) | 1.8 (1.2–2.5) | — | 3.1 (2.2–4.3) | — |
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| Cigarettes | 2.5 (1.8–3.4) | 2.1 (1.6–2.7) | 2.1 (1.5–3.1) | — | 3.1 (2.2–4.3) | — |
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| Smokeless tobacco | — | 2.7 (2.1–3.5) | 1.9 (1.4–2.7) | — | — | — |
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| Hookahs | 1.8 (1.2–2.6) | 1.3 (1.0–1.8) | — | — | 2.4 (1.6–3.7) | — |
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| Pipe tobacco | — | — | — | — | — | — |
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| Any tobacco product | 12.4 (10.8–14.1) | 12.5 (10.9–14.3) | 11.4 (9.8–13.2) | 12.3 (10.0–15.0) | 16.1 (14.1–18.4) | — |
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| Any combustible tobacco product | 4.9 (3.8–6.2) | 4.6 (3.9–5.5) | 3.8 (3.0–4.9) | 6.1 (4.5–8.1) | 6.6 (5.4–8.1) | — |
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| Two or more tobacco products | 3.7 (2.9–4.7) | 4.2 (3.5–5.1) | 3.8 (2.9–5.0) | 3.9 (3.0–5.1) | 5.0 (4.0–6.2) | — |
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Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Past 30-day use of e-cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use e-cigarettes?” Past 30-day use of cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigarettes?” Past 30-day use of cigars was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigars, cigarillos, or little cigars?” Smokeless tobacco was defined as use of chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products. Past 30-day use of smokeless tobacco was determined by asking the following question for use of chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip: “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip?” and the following question for use of snus and dissolvable tobacco products: “In the past 30 days, which of the following products did you use on at least one day?” Responses from these questions were combined to derive overall smokeless tobacco use. Past 30-day use of hookahs was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke tobacco in a hookah or water pipe?” Past 30-day use of pipe tobacco (not hookahs) was determined by asking, “In the past 30 days, which of the following products have you used on at least one day?” Because of missing data on the past 30-day use questions, denominators for each tobacco product might be different.
† Hispanic persons could be of any race.
§ Estimated weighted total number of current tobacco product users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons. Overall estimates were reported among 19,018 U.S. middle and high school students. School level was determined by self-reported grade level: high school (grades 9–12; n = 10,097) and middle school (grades 6–8; n = 8,837). Overall estimates might not directly total to sums of corresponding subgroup estimates because of rounding or inclusion of students who did not self-report sex, race/ethnicity, or grade level.
¶ Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
** Any tobacco product use was defined as use of any tobacco product (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis [small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf]) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
†† Any combustible tobacco product use was defined as use of cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
§§ Defined as use of two or more tobacco products (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
FIGURE 1Percentage of middle and high school students who currently use any tobacco product,* any combustible tobacco product, two or more tobacco product types,§ and selected tobacco products, by school level¶ and overall — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
Abbreviation: E-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Any tobacco product use was defined as use of e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products), pipe tobacco, or bidis (small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
† Any combustible tobacco product use was defined as use of cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
§ Defined as use of two or more tobacco products (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, hookahs, smokeless tobacco, pipe tobacco, or bidis) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
¶ On the basis of self-reported grade level among high school students (grades 9–12) and middle school students (grades 6–8), respectively. Current use of pipe tobacco among middle school students is not shown because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
FIGURE 2Percentage of middle and high school students who reported current use of two or more tobacco product types,* by product combination†,§ — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
Abbreviation: E-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Percentages were calculated among youths who used two or more of the following seven tobacco product types on ≥1 day during the past 30 days: e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products), hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis (small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf).
† A total of 120 distinct combinations were assessed (21 two-product type combinations, 35 three-product type combinations, 35 four-product type combinations, 21 five-product type combinations, seven six-product type combinations, and one seven-product type combination).
§ All other 113 tobacco product combinations not shown were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
Frequency of use* among middle and high school students currently using cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, and hookahs — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Days of use | E-cigarettes | Cigarettes | Cigars | Smokeless tobacco | Hookahs | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (95% CI)† | Estimated no.§ | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | % (95% CI) | Estimated weighted no. | |
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| 1–5 | 50.8 (48.1–53.4) | 2,730,000 | 55.9 (49.6–62.1) | 640,000 | 68.7 (63.9–73.1) | 980,000 | 49.3 (43.3–55.4) | 390,000 | 69.1 (62.8–74.7) | 480,000 |
| 6–19 | 18.8 (17.5–20.3) | 1,010,000 | 15.2 (12.3–18.7) | 170,000 | 14.5 (12.0–17.5) | 200,000 | 16.6 (12.7–21.4) | 130,000 | 12.4 (8.8–17.3) | 80,000 |
| 20–30 | 30.4 (27.7–33.3) | 1,630,000 | 28.9 (23.1–35.5) | 330,000 | 16.8 (12.7–21.9) | 240,000 | 34.1 (28.2–40.5) | 270,000 | 18.6 (13.1–25.6) | 120,000 |
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| 1–5 | 46.4 (43.6–49.3) | 1,910,000 | 51.5 (44.2–58.7) | 440,000 | 68.6 (63.5–73.3) | 780,000 | 44.0 (37.1–51.2) | 270,000 | 69.2 (61.7–75.8) | 350,000 |
| 6–19 | 19.4 (17.8–21.1) | 790,000 | 16.0 (12.3–20.6) | 130,000 | 14.1 (11.4–17.4) | 160,000 | 18.0 (13.7–23.4) | 110,000 | 13.2 (8.6–19.6) | 60,000 |
| 20–30 | 34.2 (31.2–37.3) | 1,400,000 | 32.5 (25.3–40.5) | 280,000 | 17.3 (13.0–22.7) | 190,000 | 37.9 (30.3–46.2) | 230,000 | 17.6 (12.0–25.1) | 80,000 |
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| 1–5 | 65.3 (61.0–69.5) | 810,000 | 70.1 (62.2–76.9) | 190,000 | 69.0 (58.3–78.0) | 190,000 | 66.0 (54.5–75.9) | 110,000 | 68.1 (58.8–76.1) | 120,000 |
| 6–19 | 16.7 (13.5–20.4) | 200,000 | —§§ | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| 20–30 | 18.0 (15.2–21.2) | 220,000 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Frequency of current use of e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars (defined as cigars, cigarillos, or little cigars), smokeless tobacco (defined as chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip; frequency of use was not assessed for snus or dissolvable tobacco products), and hookahs was determined by asking participants on how many days they smoked or used each of these tobacco products during the past 30 days. Respondents could enter a valid response of 0–30 days.
† Reported among respective current (past 30-day) users for each product. Past 30-day use of e-cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use e-cigarettes?” Past 30-day use of cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigarettes?” Past 30-day use of cigars was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigars, cigarillos, or little cigars?” Past 30-day use of smokeless tobacco was determined by asking the following question for use of chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip: “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip?” Past 30-day use of hookahs was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke tobacco in a hookah or water pipe?”
§ Estimated weighted total number of users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons. Overall estimates might not directly total to sums of corresponding subgroup estimates because of rounding or inclusion of students who did not self-report grade level.
¶ Calculated among total current users of e-cigarettes (n = 3,628), cigarettes (n = 748), cigars (n = 930), smokeless tobacco (n = 531), and hookahs (n = 477).
** Calculated among current high school tobacco product users (self-reported grades 9–12) of e-cigarettes (n = 2,709), cigarettes (n = 549), cigars (n = 727), smokeless tobacco (n = 399), and hookahs (n = 334).
†† Calculated among current middle school tobacco product users (self-reported grades 6–8) of e-cigarettes (n = 902), cigarettes (n = 190), cigars (n =197), smokeless tobacco (n = 125), and hookahs (n = 138).
§§ Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
Flavored tobacco product* use among all middle and high school students and among those who reported current use† of specified tobacco products, by school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Characteristic | Tobacco product | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any tobacco product§ | E-cigarettes | Cigarettes¶ | Cigars | Smokeless tobacco** | Hookahs | Pipe tobacco | |
| % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | |
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| Flavored tobacco product use among all students†† | 16.0 (14.6–17.4) | 13.8 (12.5–15.1) | 2.0 (1.6–2.5) | 2.2 (1.9–2.6) | 1.7 (1.3–2.2) | 0.8 (0.6–1.1) | 0.3 (0.2–0.4) |
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| Estimated weighted no. of flavored tobacco product users§§ | 4,310,000 | 3,700,000 | 530,000 | 600,000 | 450,000 | 210,000 | 60,000 |
| Flavored tobacco product use among current tobacco product users¶¶ | 69.6 (67.0–72.0) | 68.8 (66.2–71.4) | 46.7 (42.5–51.0) | 41.9 (38.0–46.0) | 48.0 (42.8–53.2) | 31.2 (25.7–37.3) | 31.4 (23.1–41.1) |
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| Middle school | 59.6 (56.4–62.8) | 59.9 (56.0–63.7) | 37.2 (29.2–45.8) | 36.1 (28.2–44.9) | 42.3 (33.8–51.2) | 27.5 (19.2–37.7) | —*** |
| High school | 72.8 (69.7–75.6) | 71.7 (68.6–74.5) | 49.8 (44.8–54.8) | 43.2 (39.1–47.4) | 49.8 (43.5–56.2) | 32.9 (26.3–40.1) | 28.0 (19.9–37.7) |
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| Female | 68.6 (64.9–72.1) | 68.3 (64.5–71.9) | 49.7 (43.1–56.2) | 38.6 (32.9–44.5) | 36.4 (26.9–47.0) | 34.7 (26.3–44.2) | — |
| Male | 70.7 (68.1–73.1) | 69.6 (66.9–72.3) | 45.1 (38.9–51.5) | 44.2 (39.3–49.1) | 50.9 (44.6–57.2) | 27.2 (19.4–36.7) | 36.2 (27.3–46.1) |
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| White, non-Hispanic | 76.8 (74.6–78.9) | 75.2 (72.6–77.6) | 45.8 (40.4–51.4) | 44.2 (37.5–51.2) | 55.8 (49.7–61.7) | 32.1 (23.0–42.9) | 31.0 (18.9–46.3) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 48.0 (41.9–54.1) | 43.1 (35.9–50.7) | 39.6 (25.6–55.6) | 41.2 (33.7–49.2) | — | 24.5 (14.0–39.4) | — |
| Hispanic††† | 63.1 (59.0–67.1) | 63.0 (58.5–67.2) | 50.8 (42.7–58.8) | 36.5 (30.2–43.3) | 29.4 (21.1–39.5) | 35.6 (25.3–47.5) | 46.5 (30.5–63.2) |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 68.1 (61.6–74.0) | 68.7 (61.3–75.2) | 47.4 (34.8–60.2) | 43.7 (33.8–54.1) | 40.1 (27.2–54.5) | 27.4 (15.8–43.2) | — |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Flavored tobacco product use was determined by the response to the question, “Which of the following tobacco products that you used in the past 30 days were flavored to taste like menthol (mint), alcohol (wine, cognac), candy, fruit, chocolate, or other sweets?" Participants could select from a list of options to designate the flavored tobacco products they had used. Among those who reported any use of each respective product during the past 30 days, those who selected the flavored product were categorized as flavored product users, those who did not select the flavored product were categorized as only nonflavored product users, and those who did not provide any response to the flavored product use question were assigned as missing flavor status.
† Current (past 30-day) use of e-cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use e-cigarettes?” Current use of cigarettes was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigarettes?” Current use of cigars was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigars, cigarillos, or little cigars?” Smokeless tobacco was defined as use of chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products. Current use of smokeless tobacco was determined by asking the following question for use of chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip: “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you use chewing tobacco, snuff, or dip?” and the following question for use of snus and dissolvable tobacco products: “In the past 30 days, which of the following products did you use on at least one day?” Responses from these questions were combined to derive overall smokeless tobacco use. Current use of hookahs was determined by asking, “During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke tobacco in a hookah or water pipe?” Current use of pipe tobacco (not hookahs) was determined by asking, “In the past 30 days, which of the following products have you used on at least one day?”
§ Any current tobacco product use was defined as use of any tobacco product (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis [small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf]) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
¶ Flavored cigarette use referred to menthol cigarettes. Menthol cigarette status was determined by asking, “Menthol cigarettes are cigarettes that taste like mint. During the past 30 days, were the cigarettes that you usually smoked menthol?” and “During the past 30 days, what brand or cigarettes did you usually smoke?” Among past 30-day cigarette smokers, those responding “yes” to the menthol question or who reported “Newport” or “Kool” as the usual cigarette brand were categorized as menthol cigarette smokers; subsequently, those who reported “no” to the menthol question and who did not report “Newport” or “Kool” brands were categorized as nonmenthol cigarette smokers; all other past 30-day cigarette smokers were assigned as missing menthol cigarette smoking status.
** Any smokeless tobacco was current use of smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days.
†† Calculated among all respondents regardless of tobacco product use status. Because of missing data, denominators for each tobacco product might be different: e-cigarettes (n = 18,914), cigarettes (n = 18,975), cigars (n = 18,958), smokeless tobacco (n = 19,018), hookahs (n = 18,948), and pipe tobacco (n = 18,821).
§§ Estimated weighted total number of flavored tobacco product users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons.
¶¶ Calculated among current users of any tobacco product (n = 4,198), e-cigarettes (n = 3,628), cigarettes (n = 748), cigars (n = 930), smokeless tobacco (n = 630), hookahs (n = 477), and pipe tobacco (n = 138).
*** Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
††† Hispanic persons could be of any race.
Reasons for e-cigarette use* among middle and high school students who reported ever using e-cigarettes, by school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Reason | Overall | School level | Sex | Race/Ethnicity | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Middle school | High school | Male | Female | White, non-Hispanic | Black, non-Hispanic | Hispanic¶ | Other, non-Hispanic | |||
| % (95% CI) | Estimated no.§ | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | |
| I was curious about them | 55.3 (53.3–57.3) | 5,110,000 | 57.1 (54.5–59.8) | 54.8 (52.5–57.0) | 52.1 (49.3–54.9) | 58.9 (56.8–61.0) | 53.1 (50.5–55.6) | 53.7 (48.8–58.5) | 61.5 (58.6–64.4) | 56.4 (48.7–64.0) |
| Friend or family member used them | 30.8 (29.1–32.6) | 2,850,000 | 36.8 (33.7–40.0) | 28.9 (26.8–31.0) | 27.1 (24.6–29.7) | 34.9 (32.9–37.0) | 31.8 (29.6–34.1) | 30.8 (26.3–35.7) | 28.1 (25.6–30.7) | 29.1 (21.3–38.3) |
| They are available in flavors, such as mint, candy, fruit, or chocolate | 22.4 (20.8–24.1) | 2,070,000 | 22.8 (20.5–25.2) | 22.3 (20.4–24.3) | 20.7 (17.9–23.8) | 24.3 (22.4–26.3) | 22.8 (21.0–24.8) | 21.7 (18.4–25.4) | 22.4 (19.7–25.3) | 19.1 (14.0–25.5) |
| I can use them to do tricks | 21.2 (19.5–23.0) | 1,960,000 | 22.6 (20.7–24.6) | 20.8 (18.5–23.1) | 23.3 (20.3–26.5) | 19.0 (17.2–20.8) | 21.6 (19.8–23.6) | 18.9 (15.3–23.2) | 21.1 (18.3–24.2) | 22.1 (15.7–30.2) |
| They are less harmful than other forms of tobacco, such as cigarettes | 15.7 (14.3–17.2) | 1,450,000 | 15.8 (14.0–17.7) | 15.6 (13.9–17.5) | 17.5 (15.4–19.7) | 13.6 (12.0–15.4) | 16.4 (14.7–18.2) | 13.0 (9.6–17.2) | 15.6 (13.3–18.1) | —** |
| I can use them unnoticed at home or at school | 13.9 (11.4–16.8) | 1,280,000 | 10.5 (8.6–12.7) | 14.9 (11.8–18.6) | 14.6 (10.3–20.2) | 13.1 (11.7–14.6) | 14.4 (12.1–17.0) | 8.0 (5.3–11.9) | 14.8 (11.0–19.6) | — |
| I was peer pressured into using them | 10.7 (9.5–12.1) | 990,000 | 11.1 (8.9–13.7) | 10.6 (9.2–12.2) | 10.7 (9.0–12.7) | 10.8 (9.2–12.6) | 11.8 (10.1–13.7) | 8.7 (6.5–11.6) | 8.8 (6.9–11.0) | — |
| To try to quit using other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 5.5 (4.5–6.7) | 500,000 | — | 6.4 (5.1–7.9) | 7.0 (5.7–8.5) | 3.7 (2.7–5.2) | 6.6 (5.2–8.4) | — | 3.8 (2.9–5.0) | — |
| They are easier to get than other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 5.4 (4.1–7.0) | 500,000 | 5.0 (3.8–6.5) | 5.5 (4.0–7.5) | 6.5 (4.5–9.4) | 4.1 (3.3–5.1) | 5.8 (4.2–8.0) | — | 4.6 (3.7–5.6) | — |
| I’ve seen people on TV, online, or in movies use them | 4.4 (3.8–5.0) | 400,000 | 6.3 (5.1–7.9) | 3.7 (3.2–4.4) | 4.2 (3.6–5.0) | 4.4 (3.6–5.4) | 3.9 (3.2–4.7) | — | 4.9 (3.7–6.5) | — |
| They cost less than other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 3.8 (3.1–4.8) | 350,000 | — | 4.2 (3.3–5.3) | 5.2 (4.0–6.7) | 2.3 (1.7–3.2) | 4.6 (3.5–6.1) | — | — | — |
| I used them for some other reason†† | 14.4 (12.4–16.6) | 1,330,000 | 15.4 (13.2–18.0) | 14.1 (11.8–16.7) | 15.8 (12.8–19.3) | 12.8 (11.4–14.3) | 15.1 (12.6–18.0) | 13.8 (10.8–17.4) | 12.9 (10.8–15.4) | — |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes; TV = television.
* Assessed by the question, “What are the reasons why you have used electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes? (Check all that apply.)” Responses were not mutually exclusive.
† Assessed by the question, “Have you ever used an e-cigarette, even once or twice?” Ever users reported e-cigarette use on ≥1 day during the past 30 days (n = 6,409).
§ Estimated weighted total number of users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons.
¶ Hispanic persons could be of any race.
** Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
†† Respondents could subsequently specify a reason through a write-in option (n = 642).
Reasons for e-cigarette use* among middle and high school students who reported using e-cigarettes and other tobacco products during the past 30 days — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Reason | Use e-cigarettes only† | Use e-cigarettes and other tobacco products§ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (95% CI) | Estimated no.¶ | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | |
| I was curious about them | 56.1 (53.4–58.7) | 1,900,000 | 38.4 (35.1–41.7) | 730,000 |
| Friend or family member used them | 23.9 (21.7–26.3) | 810,000 | 22.2 (19.6–25.1) | 420,000 |
| They are available in flavors, such as mint, candy, fruit, or chocolate | 22.3 (20.3–24.5) | 760,000 | 26.6 (23.8–29.6) | 500,000 |
| I can use them to do tricks | 22.0 (20.0–24.2) | 740,000 | 29.0 (25.6–32.7) | 550,000 |
| They are less harmful than other forms of tobacco, such as cigarettes | 17.2 (15.3–19.3) | 580,000 | 19.1 (16.7–21.9) | 360,000 |
| I can use them unnoticed at home or at school | 14.5 (12.9–16.3) | 490,000 | 22.9 (19.4–26.8) | 430,000 |
| I was peer pressured into using them | 8.9 (7.7–10.3) | 300,000 | 7.5 (5.8–9.8) | 140,000 |
| They are easier to get than other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 3.9 (3.0–5.0) | 130,000 | 9.7 (7.9–11.8) | 180,000 |
| I’ve seen people on TV, online, or in movies use them | 3.8 (3.1–4.6) | 120,000 | 5.4 (3.9–7.4) | 100,000 |
| To try to quit using other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 2.8 (1.8–4.2) | 90,000 | 17.0 (14.0–20.5) | 320,000 |
| They cost less than other tobacco products, such as cigarettes | 2.5 (1.9–3.3) | 80,000 | 11.6 (9.4–14.3) | 220,000 |
| I used them for some other reason** | 15.9 (14.0–18.0) | 540,000 | 22.2 (17.9–27.3) | 420,000 |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes; TV = television.
* Assessed by the question, “What are the reasons why you have used electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes? (Check all that apply.)” Responses were not mutually exclusive.
† Reported use of only e-cigarettes on ≥1 day during the past 30 days (n = 2,361).
§ Reported use of e-cigarettes and at least one other tobacco product (e-cigarettes and cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis [small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf]) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days (n = 1,267).
¶ Estimated weighted total number of users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons.
** Respondents could subsequently specify a reason through a write-in option (n = 465).
Percentage of middle and high school students who reported exposure* to sources of tobacco product marketing (advertisements or promotions), by school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Characteristic | Retail stores† | Internet§ | TV, streaming services, or movies¶ | Newspapers or magazines** | Any source†† |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | |
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| Male | 77.7 (75.9–79.3) | 56.3 (54.2–58.5) | 34.2 (31.7–36.8) | 53.0 (50.5–55.5) | 84.4 (83.0–85.7) |
| Female | 81.2 (79.7–82.7) | 63.1 (61.6–64.5) | 39.6 (37.7–41.6) | 53.9 (52.1–55.8) | 88.3 (87.3–89.3) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 83.1 (81.8–84.3) | 59.9 (58.3–61.5) | 34.7 (32.4–37.2) | 52.9 (50.6–55.1) | 88.3 (87.3–89.3) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 75.4 (73.1–77.6) | 61.4 (58.5–64.3) | 46.9 (43.4–50.6) | 58.3 (54.3–62.2) | 86.1 (84.2–87.8) |
| Hispanic | 76.2 (74.3–78.1) | 59.6 (57.7–61.4) | 38.0 (36.0–40.0) | 53.8 (51.7–55.8) | 84.3 (82.9–85.7) |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 68.0 (65.0–70.9) | 55.7 (52.1–59.3) | 28.8 (25.7–32.1) | 47.9 (43.7–52.1) | 78.7 (76.0–81.3) |
| School level | |||||
| Middle school | 77.3 (75.4–79.1) | 58.2 (56.6–59.7) | 35.0 (32.8–37.3) | 52.9 (50.7–55.2) | 85.2 (83.9–86.4) |
| High school | 81.2 (79.7–82.6) | 60.8 (59.2–62.4) | 38.4 (36.1–40.7) | 53.9 (51.8–56.0) | 87.3 (86.2–88.3) |
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| Sex | |||||
| Male | 56.6 (54.4–58.7) | 41.2 (39.5–43.0) | 23.9 (22.2–25.7) | 33.3 (31.2–35.5) | 67.3 (65.4–69.2) |
| Female | 60.3 (58.1–62.4) | 48.1 (46.4–49.8) | 28.5 (27.0–30.2) | 36.4 (34.7–38.0) | 71.5 (69.6–73.2) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 62.9 (60.7–65.0) | 46.2 (44.6–47.9) | 26.0 (24.2–27.8) | 34.8 (33.0–36.7) | 72.6 (70.8–74.2) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 52.2 (49.5–55.0) | 42.6 (40.0–45.2) | 30.0 (27.4–32.7) | 36.0 (32.7–39.4) | 66.5 (64.3–68.6) |
| Hispanic | 54.0 (51.9–56.2) | 43.4 (41.8–45.1) | 26.3 (24.6–28.1) | 35.5 (33.7–37.3) | 66.2 (64.1–68.2) |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 48.8 (44.7–52.9) | 41.8 (38.7–45.1) | 19.4 (17.1–21.9) | 31.9 (28.3–35.8) | 62.4 (58.9.–65.7) |
| School level | |||||
| Middle school | 53.8 (51.4–56.2) | 41.5 (40.0–43.1) | 24.3 (22.6–26.0) | 33.4 (31.4–35.4) | 65.7 (63.8–67.5) |
| High school | 62.1 (60.0–64.2) | 47.1 (45.6–48.6) | 27.7 (26.0–29.4) | 35.8 (34.0–37.7) | 72.3 (70.6–74.0) |
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| Male | 70.8 (68.8–72.8) | 40.6 (38.2–43.1) | 24.8 (22.6–27.1) | 36.9 (34.1–39.8) | 79.5 (78.0–81.0) |
| Female | 75.0 (73.4–76.5) | 45.6 (44.0–47.3) | 28.8 (27.0–30.6) | 36.4 (34.6–38.3) | 84.1 (82.9–85.2) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 77.1 (75.6–78.5) | 41.7 (39.6–43.9) | 24.3 (22.2–26.5) | 36.0 (33.7–38.4) | 83.7 (82.5–84.9) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 67.9 (65.2–70.4) | 48.7 (46.2–51.2) | 37.0 (34.0–40.2) | 41.7 (37.1–46.4) | 82.1 (80.1–83.9) |
| Hispanic | 69.2 (66.8–71.5) | 44.2 (42.4–46.0) | 27.7 (25.8–29.7) | 36.9 (35.1–38.7) | 79.7 (78.1–81.3) |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 61.1 (57.7–64.5) | 38.8 (35.3–42.3) | 21.2 (18.6–24.1) | 30.3 (26.7–34.2) | 72.9 (70.2–75.5) |
| School level | |||||
| Middle school | 71.7 (69.7–73.5) | 44.5 (42.8–46.2) | 25.9 (24.0–28.0) | 36.8 (34.8–38.8) | 81.5 (80.1–82.8) |
| High school | 73.9 (72.1–75.6) | 42.0 (39.8–44.2) | 27.5 (25.4–29.7) | 36.7 (34.4–39.1) | 82.0 (80.7–83.3) |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes; TV = television.
* Exposure to tobacco product marketing was assessed for each of four marketing sources (retail stores; Internet; television, streaming sources, or movies; and newspapers or magazines) and any source combined. For each source, exposure was assessed separately for 1) e-cigarettes and 2) cigarettes or other tobacco products. A composite measure of exposure to any tobacco product marketing was also assessed.
† Assessed by the questions, “When you go to a convenience store, supermarket, or gas station, how often do you see ads or promotions for (e-cigarettes; cigarettes or other tobacco products)?” Response options for both questions included, “I never go to a convenience store, supermarket, or gas station,” “never,” “rarely,” “sometimes,” “most of the time,” and “always.” Respondents were categorized as exposed if they reported “sometimes,” “most of the time,” or “always”; respondents were categorized as unexposed if they reported “never” or “rarely.” Persons who reported “I never go to a convenience store, supermarket, or gas station” were set to missing and excluded from product-specific analyses. Total unweighted denominators included n = 18,110 (e-cigarettes) and n = 18,034 (cigarettes or other tobacco products). A composite measure of exposure to any tobacco product marketing when going to retail stores (overall) was assessed among respondents categorized as exposed for at least one measure or unexposed across both measures (n = 18,072).
§ Assessed by the questions, “When you are using the Internet, how often do you see ads or promotions for (e-cigarettes; cigarettes or other tobacco products)?” Response options for both questions included, “I do not use the Internet,” “never,” “rarely,” “sometimes,” “most of the time,” and “always.” Respondents were categorized as exposed if they reported “sometimes,” “most of the time,” or “always”; respondents were categorized as unexposed if they reported “never” or “rarely.” Persons who reported “I do not use the Internet” were set to missing and excluded from product-specific analyses. Total unweighted denominators included n = 18,175 (e-cigarettes) and n = 18,286 (cigarettes or other tobacco products). A composite measure of exposure to any tobacco product marketing when using the Internet (overall) was assessed among respondents categorized as exposed to marketing for at least one measure or unexposed across both measures (n = 18,173).
¶ Assessed by the questions, “When you watch TV or streaming services (such as Netflix, Hulu, or Amazon Prime), or go to the movies, how often do you see ads or promotions for (e-cigarettes; cigarettes or other tobacco products)?” Response options for both questions included, “I do not watch TV or streaming services, or go to the movies,” “never,” “rarely,” “sometimes,” “most of the time,” and “always.” Respondents were categorized as exposed if they reported “sometimes,” “most of the time,” or “always”; respondents were categorized as unexposed if they reported “never” or “rarely.” Persons who reported “I do not watch TV or streaming services, or go to the movies” were set to missing and excluded from product-specific analyses. Total unweighted denominators for exposure to tobacco product marketing included n = 17,798 (e-cigarettes) and n = 17,831 (cigarettes or other tobacco products). A composite measure of exposure to any tobacco product marketing when watching television or streaming services, or going to the movies (overall) was assessed among respondents categorized as exposed for at least one measure or unexposed across both measures (n = 17,644).
** Assessed by the questions, “When you read newspapers or magazines, how often do you see ads or promotions for (e-cigarettes; cigarettes or other tobacco products)?” Response options for both questions included, “I do not read newspapers or magazines,” “never,” “rarely,” “sometimes,” “most of the time,” and “always.” Respondents were categorized as exposed if they reported “sometimes,” “most of the time,” or “always”; respondents were categorized as unexposed if they reported “never” or “rarely.” Persons who reported “I do not read newspapers or magazines” were set to missing and excluded from the analyses. Total unweighted denominators for exposure to tobacco product marketing included n = 10,209 (e-cigarettes) and n = 10,375 (cigarettes or other tobacco products). A composite measure of exposure to any tobacco product marketing when reading newspapers or magazines (overall) was assessed among respondents categorized as exposed for at least one measure or unexposed across both measures (n = 9,835).
†† A composite measure of any advertising or promotion exposure (any source) was assessed based on exposure to retail stores; the Internet, television, streaming services, movies; and newspapers or magazines. Total unweighted denominators included n = 18,534 (e-cigarettes), n = 18,621 (cigarettes or other tobacco products), and n = 18,695 (overall).
§§ Estimated weighted total number of users was rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons.
¶¶ Hispanic persons could be of any race.
*** Respondents were instructed as follows: “The next four questions ask about issues related to e-cigarette advertisement. Do not think about cigarettes or other tobacco products.”
††† Respondents were instructed as follows: “The next four questions ask about issues related to advertisements for tobacco products such as cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, roll-your-own cigarettes, pipes, snus, dissolvable tobacco, and bidis. Do not think of electronic cigarettes.”
Curiosity* about and susceptibility to tobacco product use among never users of each specific product, by school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Characteristic | Curiosity | Susceptibility | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (95% CI) | Estimated no.§ | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | |
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| Sex | ||||
| Male | 37.3 (35.8–38.8) | 3,330,000 | 43.4 (41.7–45.1) | 3,850,000 |
| Female | 41.1 (39.2–43.0) | 3,450,000 | 46.9 (44.9–48.8) | 3,930,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 39.8 (38.1–41.5) | 3,630,000 | 45.2 (43.4–46.9) | 4,110,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 32.0 (28.9–35.1) | 810,000 | 38.3 (34.8–41.8) | 960,000 |
| Hispanic | 42.3 (40.5–44.2) | 1,790,000 | 49.1 (46.9–51.3) | 2,060,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 39.8 (35.4–44.4) | 430,000 | 46.2 (41.7–50.7) | 500,000 |
| School level | ||||
| Middle school | 40.6 (38.9–42.4) | 3,840,000 | 47.0 (45.1–48.9) | 4,420,000 |
| High school | 37.2 (34.9–39.6) | 2,950,000 | 42.8 (40.6–44.9) | 3,370,000 |
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| Sex | ||||
| Male | 36.8 (35.5–38.2) | 4,180,000 | 46.4 (44.8–47.9) | 5,260,000 |
| Female | 37.2 (35.4–39.0) | 4,090,000 | 45.5 (43.7–47.4) | 5,010,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 37.2 (35.8–38.6) | 4,490,000 | 45.7 (44.2–47.3) | 5,520,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 29.8 (26.4–33.3) | 910,000 | 38.4 (34.1–42.9) | 1,180,000 |
| Hispanic | 40.5 (38.4–42.7) | 2,240,000 | 50.5 (48.3–52.8) | 2,780,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 38.4 (33.9–43.1) | 500,000 | 46.1 (41.4–50.8) | 600,000 |
| School level | ||||
| Middle school | 39.9 (38.5–41.3) | 4,310,000 | 49.5 (47.7–51.3) | 5,350,000 |
| High school | 34.3 (32.3–36.4) | 3,980,000 | 42.7 (40.6–44.8) | 4,950,000 |
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| Sex | ||||
| Male | 31.1 (29.8–32.4) | 3,590,000 | 38.9 (37.6–40.3) | 4,480,000 |
| Female | 24.8 (23.7–25.9) | 2,810,000 | 32.8 (31.6–34.1) | 3,710,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 27.0 (25.8–28.4) | 3,410,000 | 34.6 (33.2–36.1) | 4,350,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 26.0 (23.9–28.3) | 740,000 | 34.1 (31.6–36.8) | 980,000 |
| Hispanic | 31.6 (29.7–33.5) | 1,790,000 | 40.8 (38.6–43.0) | 2,300,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 27.4 (24.2–30.9) | 360,000 | 32.9 (29.6–36.4) | 440,000 |
| School level | ||||
| Middle school | 26.5 (25.3–27.7) | 2,930,000 | 34.6 (33.1–36.1) | 3,810,000 |
| High school | 29.3 (27.9–30.7) | 3,480,000 | 37.2 (35.7–38.7) | 4,400,000 |
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| Sex | ||||
| Male | 18.7 (16.9–20.6) | 2,300,000 | 24.6 (22.2–27.3) | 3,010,000 |
| Female | 13.1 (12.0–14.3) | 1,620,000 | 17.7 (16.5–19.1) | 2,180,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 16.8 (15.4–18.3) | 2,220,000 | 21.7 (19.9–23.6) | 2,860,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 9.8 (8.3–11.6) | 330,000 | 14.4 (12.3–16.7) | 480,000 |
| Hispanic | 16.6 (15.0–18.3) | 1,040,000 | 23.0 (21.0–25.1) | 1,420,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 17.5 (14.3–21.2) | 240,000 | 22.3 (18.6–26.5) | 300,000 |
| School level | ||||
| Middle school | 19.2 (17.8–20.7) | 2,180,000 | 25.7 (23.9–27.6) | 2,900,000 |
| High school | 13.1 (11.6–14.7) | 1,750,000 | 17.3 (15.6–19.2) | 2,300,000 |
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| Sex | ||||
| Male | 21.6 (20.2–23.0) | 2,780,000 | 28.5 (27.0–30.0) | 3,620,000 |
| Female | 25.0 (23.7–26.4) | 2,990,000 | 31.5 (30.0–33.0) | 3,730,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 21.7 (20.5–23.1) | 3,020,000 | 27.9 (26.5–29.3) | 3,860,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 22.4 (20.3–24.6) | 700,000 | 30.1 (28.1–32.3) | 920,000 |
| Hispanic | 28.1 (26.3–30.0) | 1,670,000 | 35.5 (33.5–37.6) | 2,100,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | 20.7 (18.1–23.6) | 280,000 | 25.9 (23.0–29.0) | 340,000 |
| School level | ||||
| Middle school | 18.8 (17.5–20.1) | 2,130,000 | 25.2 (23.7–26.8) | 2,840,000 |
| High school | 26.9 (25.5–28.4) | 3,630,000 | 33.8 (32.3–35.4) | 4,520,000 |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; e-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Assessed by the question, “Have you ever been curious about (tobacco product)?” Responses were recoded as highly curious (definitely yes, probably yes, or probably not) and not curious (definitely not). Overall estimates of curiosity were calculated among never tobacco product users of the specific tobacco product: e-cigarettes (n = 12,523), cigarettes (n = 16,031), cigars (n = 16,411), smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip; n = 17,664), and hookahs (n = 17,627).
† Assessed by the questions, “Do you think that you will use (tobacco product) soon? Do you think you will use (tobacco product) in the next year? If one of your best friends were to offer you (tobacco product), would you try it? Have you ever been curious about (tobacco product)?” Susceptibility was defined as a response other than “definitely not” to any of the four questions. Respondents with a missing value for all four questions or any combination of “definitely not” and missing value or values were recoded as missing for susceptibility. Overall estimates of susceptibility were calculated among never tobacco product users of the specific tobacco product: e-cigarettes (n = 12,448), cigarettes (n = 16,010), cigars (n = 16,347), smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, snuff, and dip; n = 17,513), and hookahs (n = 17,549).
§ Estimated weighted total numbers were rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons. Overall estimates might not directly total to sums of corresponding subgroup estimates because of rounding or inclusion of students who did not self-report sex, race/ethnicity, or grade level.
¶ Hispanic persons could be of any race.
FIGURE 3Harm perceptions of intermittent use of e-cigarettes, cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, and hookahs* reported by middle and high school students — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
Abbreviation: E-cigarettes = electronic cigarettes.
* Assessed by the questions, “How much do you think people harm themselves when they (smoke cigarettes; use chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, or dissolvable tobacco products; use e-cigarettes; or smoke tobacco in a hookah or water pipe) some days but not every day?” Response options included “no harm,” “little harm,” “some harm,” and “a lot of harm” for each of the four tobacco products assessed. Harm perceptions of intermittent use of other tobacco products were not assessed in the 2019 National Youth Tobacco Survey.
Urges to use tobacco products and quitting behaviors among middle and high school students who reported current tobacco product use,* by school level, sex, and race/ethnicity — National Youth Tobacco Survey, United States, 2019
| Characteristic | Urges to use tobacco products | Quitting behaviors | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Past 30-day craving† | Within 30 minutes of waking§ | Thinking about quitting¶ | Past-year quit attempt** | |||||
| % (95% CI) | Estimated no.†† | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | % (95% CI) | Estimated no. | |
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| Sex | ||||||||
| Male | 23.8 (19.9–28.1) | 760,000 | 15.7 (12.7–19.4) | 500,000 | 56.8 (54.2–59.2) | 1,740,000 | 57.0 (54.3–59.6) | 1,730,000 |
| Female | 25.8 (22.9–28.9) | 740,000 | 11.5 (9.5–13.9) | 330,000 | 58.9 (55.6–62.1) | 1,580,000 | 58.0 (55.0–61.0) | 1,560,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 28.7 (25.5–32.1) | 1,070,000 | 16.5 (13.9–19.5) | 610,000 | 56.2 (54.2–58.9) | 1,990,000 | 55.3 (52.4–58.2) | 1,950,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 15.8 (12.0–20.6) | 100,000 | — | — | 59.5 (53.8–65.0) | 370,000 | 59.1 (53.3–64.6) | 360,000 |
| Hispanic¶¶ | 18.3 (15.1–21.9) | 250,000 | 9.2 (7.2–11.6) | 120,000 | 61.6 (58.0–65.0) | 810,000 | 62.9 (59.0–66.7) | 820,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | — | — | — | — | 56.7 (45.8–67.1) | 120,000 | 56.9 (48.6–64.9) | 120,000 |
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| Sex | ||||||||
| Male | 25.5 (21.1–30.5) | 630,000 | 18.0 (14.4–22.2) | 440,000 | 57.2 (54.3–60.0) | 1,350,000 | 56.0 (53.1–58.9) | 1,310,000 |
| Female | 26.3 (22.9–30.0) | 560,000 | 13.0 (10.7–15.8) | 280,000 | 58.2 (54.8–61.5) | 1,180,000 | 55.3 (51.7–58.8) | 1,120,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 29.9 (26.2–33.8) | 900,000 | 18.7 (15.8–22.1) | 560,000 | 56.2 (53.1–59.3) | 1,620,000 | 53.8 (50.4–57.1) | 1,540,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 16.1 (11.7–21.8) | 70,000 | — | — | 61.2 (56.1–66.2) | 280,000 | 58.7 (52.4–64.6) | 260,000 |
| Hispanic | 17.4 (14.0–21.4) | 160,000 | 9.4 (6.8–12.9) | 80,000 | 61.6 (57.2–65.7) | 530,000 | 60.3 (55.2–65.1) | 520,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | — | — | — | — | 52.7 (41.6–63.5) | 80,000 | 56.8 (48.3–64.9) | 90,000 |
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| Sex | ||||||||
| Male | 18.2 (14.7–22.4) | 130,000 | — | — | 54.9 (48.3–61.5) | 370,000 | 59.6 (53.6–65.4) | 400,000 |
| Female | 24.6 (19.4–30.8) | 170,000 | — | — | 61.0 (54.3–67.3) | 390,000 | 66.7 (61.4–71.5) | 430,000 |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 23.7 (18.5–29.9) | 160,000 | — | — | 55.8 (49.3–62.1) | 360,000 | 62.4 (54.7–69.5) | 410,000 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | — | — | — | — | 54.6 (41.4–67.2) | 90,000 | 60.3 (51.5–68.5) | 90,000 |
| Hispanic | 20.3 (15.7–25.8) | 90,000 | — | — | 61.7 (54.9–68.0) | 260,000 | 67.6 (61.7–72.9) | 280,000 |
| Other, non-Hispanic | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Abbreviation: CI = confidence interval.
* Any current tobacco product use was defined as use of any tobacco product (e-cigarettes, cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, hookahs, pipe tobacco, or bidis [small brown cigarettes wrapped in a leaf]) on ≥1 day during the past 30 days (n = 4,198).
† Assessed by the question, “During the past 30 days, have you had a strong craving or felt like you really needed to use a tobacco product of any kind?” The response options were yes or no.
§ Assessed by the question, “How soon after you wake up do you want to use a tobacco product?” Response options were dichotomized as within 30 minutes (within 5 minutes or from 6 to 30 minutes) or not within 30 minutes (from more than 30 minutes to 1 hour, after >1 hour but <24 hours, “I rarely want to use tobacco products,” or “I do not want to use tobacco products”).
¶ Assessed by the question, “Are you seriously thinking about quitting the use of all tobacco products?” Response options were dichotomized as yes (“yes, during the next 30 days”; “yes, during the next 6 months”; “yes, during the next 12 months”; or “yes, but not during the next 12 months”) or no (“no, I am not thinking about quitting the use of all tobacco products”).
** Assessed by the question, “During the past 12 months, how many times have you stopped using all tobacco products for one day or longer because you were trying to quit all tobacco products for good?” Response options were dichotomized as yes (one time, two times, three to five times, six to nine times, or ≥10 times) or no (“no, I did not try to quit during the past 12 months”).
†† Estimated weighted total numbers of users were rounded down to the nearest 10,000 persons. Overall estimates might not directly total to sums of corresponding subgroup estimates because of rounding or inclusion of students who did not self-report sex, race/ethnicity, or grade level.
§§ Data were statistically unreliable because of unweighted denominator <50 or a relative standard error >30%.
¶¶ Hispanic persons could be of any race.