| Literature DB >> 32592159 |
Rebecca D Jones1, Matthew Asare2,3, Beth Lanning1.
Abstract
E-cigarette use among young adults is a major public health concern. Approximately 17.7-40% of college students have tried or are currently using e-cigarettes. While a few studies have examined e-cigarette use among youth, opportunity exists to understand psychosocial factors that influence college students' e-cigarette behavior. The main purpose of this study is to examine the associations between the constructs of self-efficacy, knowledge, depression and anxiety symptoms, and e-cigarette use among college students. A retrospective cross-sectional survey (20-items) design was used for data collection. Bivariate analysis and analysis of variance (ANOVA) were used to evaluate associations between the independent variables and the dependent variable. A total of 872 college students between the ages of 18 and 25 completed the survey in Qualtrics. A significant association between gender and frequency of e-cigarette use was found (χ2 = 22.94, p < .001). ANOVA results showed significant relationships between knowledge [F (3, 808) = 9.01, p < 0.001], self-efficacy [F (3, 808) = 4.85, p < 0.01], depression [F (3,808) = 8.31, p < .05], and e-cigarette use. Post hoc analysis revealed students who never used e-cigarettes scored higher on knowledge and self-efficacy than students who used every day, somedays or rarely, indicating never-users have higher knowledge of negative effects associated with e-cigarette use and have higher self-confidence than e-cigarette users. The study's findings highlight that modifiable factors such as knowledge about harmful effects of e-cigarettes and self-confidence are associated with low e-cigarette use. Interventions could be designed to target these modifiable factors.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; College students; Depression; E-cigarette; Self-efficacy; Vaping
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32592159 PMCID: PMC7317082 DOI: 10.1007/s10900-020-00869-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Health ISSN: 0094-5145
Frequency of E-cigarette use by demographic characteristics (n = 811)
| Characteristic | n | Everyday | Somedays | Rarely | Never | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | < .001 | |||||
| Male | 305(37.6%) | 25 (3.1%) | 32 (3.9%) | 41 (5.1%) | 207 (25.5%) | |
| Female | 501 (61.8%) | 32 (3.9%) | 18 (2.2%) | 51 (6.3%) | 400 (49.3%) | |
| Rather not say | 5 (0.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.1%) | 1 (0.1%) | 3 (0.4%) | |
| Classification | .521 | |||||
| Freshmen | 116 (14.3%) | 4 (0.5%) | 9 (1.1%) | 10 (1.2%) | 93 (11.5%) | |
| Sophomore | 105 (12.9%) | 8 (1.0%) | 4 (0.5%) | 14 (1.7%) | 79 (9.7%) | |
| Junior | 168 (20.7%) | 13 (1.6%) | 15 (1.8%) | 18 (2.2%) | 122 (15%) | |
| Senior | 423 (52.1%) | 32 (3.9%) | 23 (2.8%) | 51 (6.3%) | 317 (39%) | |
| Race/Ethnicity | .278 | |||||
| Hispanic/Latino | 110 (13.5%) | 7 (0.9%) | 9 (1.1%) | 14 (1.7%) | 80 (9.9%) | |
| African American | 55 (6.8%) | 4 (0.5%) | 4 (0.5%) | 2 (0.2%) | 45 (5.5%) | |
| Native American | 4 (0.5%) | 1 (0.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.1%) | 2 (0.2%) | |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 98 (12.1%) | 12 (1.5%) | 7 (0.9%) | 12 (1.5%) | 67 (8.3%) | |
| Non-Hispanic White | 504 (62.1%) | 31 (3.8%) | 29 (3.6%) | 55 (6.8%) | 389 (47.9%) | |
| Other | 41 (5.0%) | 2 (0.2%) | 2 (0.2%) | 9 (1.1%) | 28 (3.4%) |
Chi-square tests of association for group comparisons
Demographic characteristics mean scores and standard deviation for knowledge, GSE, PHQ, GAD, and GPA (n = 811)
| Characteristic | Knowledge | Self-efficacy | Depression | Anxiety | GPA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 28.71 (4.96)* | 31.89 (6.02) | 12.83 (4.77) | 10.41 (4.33) | 3.42 (0.37) |
| Female | 32.09 (4.50)* | 31.52 (5.15) | 13.44 (4.76) | 11.42 (4.37) | 3.51 (0.36) |
| Rather not say | 32.20 (3.77) | 30.20 (5.85) | 16.80 (6.38) | 14.00 (6.36) | 3.32 (0.54) |
| Classification | |||||
| Freshmen | 31.12 (5.15) | 32.07 (4.81) | 13.69 (5.73) | 11.10 (4.72) | 3.53 (0.35) |
| Sophomore | 31.12 (4.91) | 31.26 (5.80) | 13.61 (4.26) | 11.30 (4.03) | 3.41 (0.45) |
| Junior | 30.41 (5.60) | 31.10 (5.33) | 13.76 (5.28) | 11.38 (4.88) | 3.46 (0.39) |
| Senior | 30.82 (5.04) | 31.85 (5.65) | 12.80 (4.37) | 10.87 (4.20) | 3.48 (0.34) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||||
| Hispanic/Latino | 31.18 (4.9) | 31.51 (5.53) | 13.94 (5.14) | 11.51 (4.68) | 3.33 (0.47) |
| African American | 30.24 (4.65) | 30.49 (5.55) | 14.20 (5.24) | 11.36 (4.63) | 3.27 (0.38) |
| Native American | 30.50 (5.45) | 32.50 (3.79) | 13.00 (0.82) | 12.50 (3.0) | 3.51 (0.51) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 29.79 (4.65) | 30.19 (6.07) | 14.43 (5.53) | 11.31 (4.05) | 3.42 (0.37) |
| Non-Hispanic White | 31.13 (4.52) | 32.20 (5.26) | 12.66 (4.44) | 10.83 (4.37) | 3.54 (0.32) |
| Other | 29.59 (4.52) | 30.20 (5.96) | 14.12 (4.64) | 11.63 (4.56) | 3.34 (0.33) |
GSE general self-efficacy scale, PHQ patient health questionnaire, GAD generalized anxiety disorder scale, GPA grade point average
*p < 0.01
Mean, standard deviation, and bivariate results for knowledge, GSE, PHQ, GAD, and GPA compared to e-cigarette use frequency
| Characteristic | Every day (n = 57) | Somedays (n = 51) | Rarely (n = 93) | Never (n = 611) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge (mean, SD) | 26.61 (4.77) | 27.33 (4.22) | 27.70 (3.09) | 28.66 (3.30) | > .001 |
| Self-efficacy (mean, SD) | 29.02 (8.87) | 32.18 (4.66) | 31.67 (5.73) | 31.85 (5.04) | .002 |
| Depression (mean, SD) | 13.63 (5.03) | 14.20 (4.54) | 13.87 (5.40) | 13.01 (4.67) | .040* |
| Anxiety (mean, SD) | 11.39 (4.43) | 11.67 (4.69) | 11.60 (4.39) | 10.90 (4.37) | .319 |
| GPA (mean, SD) | 3.31 (0.38) | 3.41 (0.33) | 3.43 (0.33) | 3.50 (0.37) | .001 |
ANOVA one-way analysis used to compare means
GSE general self-efficacy scale, PHQ patient health questionnaire, GAD generalized anxiety disorder scale, GPA grade point average
*Kruskal–Wallis test for independent samples used due to violation of normalcy