| Literature DB >> 32548357 |
Jack A Pfeiffer1,2, Lindsay K Tompkins1, Joy L Hart2,3,4, Anshula Kesh4, Allison Groom4, Thanh-Huyen T Vu4,5, Jennie Z Ma4,6, Robyn Landry4, Thomas J Payne4,7, Aida L Giachello4,8, Rose Marie Robertson4, Kandi L Walker2,3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) are a relatively new type of nicotine-containing product that has risen greatly in use within the past decade, displacing conventional tobacco products as the dominant source of nicotine exposure by many groups. Among those impacted are large sections of US youth. Though health outcomes associated with ENDS use are still being assessed, several potential harms have been noted in the extant literature. The purpose of this study is to examine which US youth subpopulations are at greatest risk for ENDS ever use and how perceptions pertaining to nicotine-containing products relate to this risk.Entities:
Keywords: e-nicotine; electronic cigarette; risk of tobacco use; tobacco; tobacco perceptions; vaping
Year: 2020 PMID: 32548357 PMCID: PMC7291885 DOI: 10.18332/tpc/117477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Prev Cessat ISSN: 2459-3087
Sociodemographic descriptive statistics in unweighted and weighted samples by ENDS ever use status, USA 2017
| 13–14 | 366 (13.8) | 148 (9.2) | 218 (21.0) | 550 (22.0) | 167 (12.4) | 383 (33.1) | ||
| 15–16 | 670 (25.2) | 397 (24.5) | 273 (26.3) | 863 (34.5) | 466 (34.6) | 397 (34.4) | ||
| 17–18 | 1618 (61.0) | 1072 (66.3) | 546 (52.7) | 1088 (43.5) | 713 (53.0) | 375 (32.5) | ||
| Male | 1143 (43.1) | 781 (48.3) | 362 (34.9) | 1128 (45.1) | 779 (57.9) | 350 (30.2) | ||
| Female | 1511 (56.9) | 836 (51.7) | 675 (65.1) | 1373 (54.9) | 567 (42.1) | 806 (69.8) | ||
| Non-Hispanic White | 1527 (57.5) | 1025 (63.4) | 502 (48.4) | 1525 (61.0) | 889 (66.0) | 636 (55.1) | ||
| Non-Hispanic Black | 383 (14.4) | 173 (10.7) | 210 (20.3) | 333 (13.3) | 125 (9.3) | 208 (18.0) | ||
| Hispanic | 394 (14.9) | 238 (14.7) | 156 (15.0) | 473 (18.9) | 261 (19.4) | 212 (18.3) | ||
| Non-Hispanic Other | 350 (13.2) | 181 (11.2) | 169 (16.3) | 170 (6.8) | 71 (5.3) | 99 (8.6) | ||
| 0.0729 | ||||||||
| Straight | 2122 (79.9) | 1270 (78.5) | 852 (82.2) | 1980 (79.2) | 1048 (77.9) | 933 (80.8) | ||
| LGBTQ | 532 (20.1) | 347 (21.5) | 185 (17.8) | 521 (20.8) | 298 (22.1) | 222 (19.2) | ||
| 1 | 92 (3.5) | 65 (4.0) | 27 (2.6) | 70 (2.8) | 52 (3.9) | 18 (1.6) | ||
| 2 | 298 (11.2) | 198 (12.2) | 100 (9.6) | 229 (9.2) | 135 (10.0) | 94 (8.1) | ||
| 3 | 575 (21.7) | 377 (23.3) | 198 (19.1) | 518 (20.7) | 306 (22.7) | 212 (18.4) | ||
| 4 | 768 (28.9) | 454 (28.1) | 314 (30.3) | 739 (29.5) | 380 (28.2) | 359 (31.1) | ||
| 5 | 485 (18.3) | 287 (17.8) | 198 (19.1) | 492 (19.7) | 270 (20.1) | 222 (19.2) | ||
| ≥6 | 436 (16.4) | 236 (14.6) | 200 (19.3) | 453 (18.1) | 203 (15.1) | 250 (21.6) | ||
| Both parents | 1468 (55.3) | 812 (50.2) | 656 (63.3) | 1533 (61.3) | 751 (55.8) | 782 (67.7) | ||
| One parent | 793 (29.9) | 493 (30.5) | 300 (28.9) | 733 (29.3) | 410 (30.5) | 323 (28.0) | ||
| Other guardian | 98 (3.7) | 70 (4.3) | 28 (2.7) | 85 (3.4) | 58 (4.3) | 27 (2.3) | ||
| None of the above | 295 (11.1) | 242 (15.0) | 53 (5.1) | 150 (6.0) | 127 (9.4) | 23 (2.0) | ||
| 0.5570 | ||||||||
| Yes | 852 (32.1) | 483 (29.9) | 369 (35.6) | 894 (35.7) | 474 (35.2) | 420 (36.4) | ||
| No | 1802 (67.9) | 1134 (70.1) | 668 (64.4) | 1607 (64.3) | 872 (64.8) | 735 (63.6) | ||
| Less than high school graduate | 296 (11.2) | 179 (11.1) | 117 (11.3) | 288 (11.5) | 157 (11.7) | 131 (11.3) | ||
| High school graduate or GED | 627 (23.6) | 411 (25.4) | 216 (20.8) | 507 (20.3) | 304 (22.6) | 203 (17.6) | ||
| Some college | 363 (13.7) | 254 (15.7) | 109 (10.5) | 365 (14.6) | 232 (17.2) | 133 (11.5) | ||
| Associate’s or technical degree | 337 (12.7) | 226 (14.0) | 111 (10.7) | 312 (12.5) | 185 (13.7) | 127 (11.0) | ||
| Bachelor’s degree | 603 (22.7) | 338 (20.9) | 265 (25.6) | 576 (23.0) | 270 (20.1) | 306 (26.5) | ||
| Graduate or professional degree | 428 (16.1) | 209 (12.9) | 219 (21.1) | 453 (18.1) | 198 (14.7) | 255 (22.1) | ||
| Middle school or less | 314 (11.8) | 126 (7.8) | 188 (18.1) | 495 (19.8) | 157 (11.7) | 338 (29.3) | ||
| High school | 1258 (47.4) | 723 (44.7) | 535 (51.6) | 1670 (66.8) | 940 (69.8) | 730 (63.2) | ||
| High school graduate or greater | 1082 (40.8) | 768 (47.5) | 314 (30.3) | 336 (13.4) | 249 (18.5) | 87 (7.5) | ||
| 0.0971 | ||||||||
| Urban | 951 (35.8) | 595 (36.8) | 356 (34.3) | 836 (33.4) | 479 (35.6) | 357 (30.9) | ||
| Suburban | 1119 (42.2) | 655 (40.5) | 464 (44.8) | 1080 (43.2) | 542 (40.3) | 538 (46.6) | ||
| Rural | 584 (22.0) | 367 (22.7) | 217 (20.9) | 585 (23.4) | 325 (24.1) | 260 (22.5) | ||
| Yes | 1356 (51.1) | 1227 (75.9) | 129 (12.4) | 1093 (43.7) | 977 (72.6) | 116 (10.0) | ||
| No | 1298 (48.9) | 390 (24.1) | 908 (87.6) | 1408 (56.3) | 369 (27.4) | 1039 (90.0) | ||
ENDS: electronic nicotine delivery systems.
Percentages (%) as per cent of total column N, for each variable category.
Percentages (%) as per cent of total column n, for each variable category.
Chi-squared p-value for comparison between ENDS use status categories.
Nicotine-containing product ever use in weighted sample, youth aged 13–18 years, USA 2017 (N=2501)
| ENDS | 1346 (53.8) | 1155 (46.2) |
| Cigarettes | 828 (33.1) | 1673 (66.9) |
| Cigarillos | 522 (20.9) | 1979 (79.1) |
| Hookah | 453 (18.1) | 2048 (81.9) |
| Filtered cigars | 402 (16.1) | 2099 (83.9) |
| Traditional cigars | 363 (14.5) | 2138 (85.5) |
| Smokeless tobacco | 307 (12.3) | 2194 (87.7) |
| Bidis and kreteks | 154 (6.1) | 2347 (93.9) |
| Dissolveable tobacco | 113 (4.5) | 2388 (95.5) |
| Any nicotine-containing product | 1462 (58.5) | 1039 (41.5) |
| Any conventional nicotine-containing product | 1093 (43.7) | 1408 (56.3) |
| ENDS poly use | 977 (39.1) | 1524 (60.9) |
ENDS: electronic nicotine delivery systems.
Percentages (%) as per cent of total weighted sample N.
Defined as having ever used ENDS and at least one type of conventional nicotine-containing product.
First nicotine-containing product used, youth aged 13–18 years, USA 2017 (N=1461)
| ENDS | 649 (44.4) |
| Cigarettes | 518 (35.5) |
| Hookah | 94 (6.4) |
| Smokeless tobacco | 65 (4.5) |
| Cigarillos | 60 (4.1) |
| Traditional cigars | 31 (2.1) |
| Filtered cigars | 16 (1.1) |
| Dissolveable tobacco | 12 (0.8) |
| Other | 9 (0.6) |
| Bidis and kreteks | 7 (0.5) |
ENDS: electronic nicotine delivery systems.
Percentages (%) as per cent of nicotine-containing product ever users in weighted sample.
Binary logistic regression examining association between ENDS ever use and unweighted and weighted sample characteristics – initial model, youth aged 13–18 years, USA 2017
| 1.20 | 1.28 | |||||
| 19.68 | 19.37 | |||||
| ENDS are more dangerous than conventional tobacco | 1.60 | 0.91–2.81 | 0.1005 | 0.94 | 0.54–1.65 | 0.8379 |
| ENDS are safer than conventional tobacco | 2.94 | 2.41 | ||||
| 0.88 | 0.70–1.11 | 0.2845 | 0.94 | 0.73–1.20 | 0.6171 | |
| 0.86 | 0.67–1.10 | 0.2324 | 0.86 | 0.66–1.11 | 0.2548 | |
| 2.32 | 2.40 | |||||
| Household size | 1.04 | 0.97–1.12 | 0.3118 | 1.06 | 0.98–1.14 | 0.1349 |
| 1.06 | 1.12 | |||||
| 0.98 | 0.93–1.03 | 0.3448 | 0.93 | |||
| One parent | 1.26 | 0.96–1.65 | 0.0919 | 1.23 | 0.93–1.63 | 0.1511 |
| Other guardian | 1.26 | 0.66–2.38 | 0.4818 | 1.64 | 0.80–3.36 | 0.1742 |
| None of the above | 1.63 | 1.66 | 0.86–3.20 | 0.1310 | ||
| 0.69 | 0.69 | |||||
| Less than high school graduate | 0.73 | 0.48–1.10 | 0.1328 | 0.52 | ||
| Some college | 1.33 | 0.90–1.97 | 0.1551 | 1.22 | 0.81–1.84 | 0.3302 |
| Associate’s or technical degree | 1.27 | 0.86–1.89 | 0.2335 | 0.99 | 0.65–1.50 | 0.9625 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 0.70 | 0.49 | ||||
| Graduate or professional degree | 0.51 | 0.49 | ||||
| High school | 1.11 | 0.72–1.72 | 0.6462 | 1.03 | 0.69–1.53 | 0.8817 |
| High school graduate or greater | 0.95 | 0.54–1.69 | 0.8647 | 0.90 | 0.49–1.65 | 0.7355 |
| 1.24 | 1.26 | |||||
| Non-Hispanic Black | 0.53 | 0.56 | ||||
| Hispanic | 0.74 | 0.53–1.03 | 0.0764 | 0.78 | 0.56–1.07 | 0.1240 |
| Non-Hispanic Other | 0.80 | 0.58–1.12 | 0.1953 | 0.57 | ||
| 1.03 | 0.97–1.10 | 0.3602 | 0.99 | 0.93–1.06 | 0.8663 | |
| 1.32 | 0.99–1.77 | 0.0591 | 1.26 | 0.93–1.70 | 0.1320 | |
| Urban | 1.02 | 0.79–1.32 | 0.8852 | 1.00 | 0.76–1.32 | 0.9925 |
| Rural | 0.86 | 0.63–1.17 | 0.3293 | 0.87 | 0.64–1.20 | 0.4020 |
ENDS: electronic nicotine delivery systems.
AOR: adjusted odds ratio. CI: confidence interval.
Binary logistic regression examining association between ENDS ever use and unweighted and weighted sample characteristics – final model, youth aged 13–18 years, USA 2017
| 1.21 | 1.30 | |||||
| 20.23 | 19.96 | |||||
| ENDS are more dangerous than conventional tobacco | 1.50 | 0.86–2.60 | 0.1540 | 0.90 | 0.52–1.56 | 0.7163 |
| ENDS are safer than conventional tobacco | 2.82 | 2.37 | ||||
| 2.24 | 2.25 | |||||
| 1.05 | 1.11 | |||||
| 0.98 | 0.94–1.03 | 0.4084 | 0.93 | |||
| 0.73 | 0.75 | |||||
| Less than high school graduate | 0.74 | 0.49–1.12 | 0.1417 | 0.54 | ||
| Some college | 1.31 | 0.89–1.94 | 0.1687 | 1.20 | 0.80–1.80 | 0.3731 |
| Associate’s or technical degree | 1.26 | 0.85–1.85 | 0.2526 | 0.96 | 0.64–1.45 | 0.8607 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 0.69 | 0.48 | ||||
| Graduate or professional degree | 0.50 | 0.49 | ||||
| 1.24 | 1.26 | |||||
| Non-Hispanic Black | 0.57 | 0.57 | ||||
| Hispanic | 0.77 | 0.56–1.07 | 0.1184 | 0.79 | 0.58–1.07 | 0.1334 |
| Non-Hispanic Other | 0.82 | 0.59–1.14 | 0.2432 | 0.58 | ||
ENDS: electronic nicotine delivery systems.
AOR: adjusted odds ratio. CI: confidence interval.