FDA/CDC

E-cigarette use, interest in flavors remains high among youth


 

FROM THE MMWR

Reasons for use, flavor, and harm perception

The most common flavored tobacco product used among youth was e-cigarettes, reported by 68.8% of current e-cigarette users, followed by smokeless tobacco (48%), cigarettes (46.7%, only menthol), cigars, pipe tobacco, and hookahs.

The top reasons youth cited for trying e-cigarettes were curiosity (55.3%), a friend or family member’s use (30.8%), and their availability in a wide range of flavors (22.4%). Almost as popular as flavor availability was e-cigarette users’ interest in doing “tricks” with the product (21.2%).

The cross-sectional questionnaire method of the study precluded the ability to draw conclusions about why students might perceive a particular tobacco product as more or less harmful. However, public health officials have expressed concern that flavors reduce the perceived harm that can come from the products. Dr. Wilson said the attraction to e-cigarette flavors is “huge.”

“If electronic cigarettes were only available in tobacco flavor, I do not believe that many teenagers at all would try them,” Dr. Wilson said. “They think because they’re sweet and flavored that they actually aren’t harmful. It makes the kids think these are safe products.”

More than one in four students (28.2%) perceived intermittent e-cigarette use as causing little to no harm, and only 16.4% similarly saw little or no harm from intermittent hookah use, compared with 11.5% for smokeless tobacco and 9.5% for cigarettes. Less than a third of respondents (32.3%) saw intermittent e-cigarette use as causing a lot of harm, compared with much higher percentages for cigarettes (54.9%) and smokeless tobacco (52.5%).

Part of the problem with harm perception is the narrative promoted by e-cigarette companies, Dr. Wilson said.

“From the very beginning, they started with a campaign that called this harmless water vapor, which it is absolutely not,” she said. “It’s an aerosol of toxic chemicals and nicotine, which is addictive. We know that nicotine that can impact scores of cognitive tests and impulsivity. We have no idea what these really high levels [of nicotine] will do.”

Further, potential long-term harm is still an open question, she pointed out.

“We also know that these are particulates and toxins that are being inhaled into the lungs,” Dr. Wilson said. “We know they have some impact on asthma, and we don’t know what the impact is for using for 10 or 20 years.”

Curiosity about e-cigarettes and about traditional cigarettes were prevalent in similar proportions among youth who had never tried a tobacco product: 39.1% of never-users were curious about e-cigarettes, and 37% about traditional cigarettes. In addition to curiosity, researchers assess susceptibility among those who have never tried a tobacco product and found nearly identical susceptibility to e-cigarettes (45%) and traditional cigarettes (45.9%).

The survey also asked students about their exposure to tobacco advertising or promotions from a wide range of sources: convenience stores, supermarkets, gas stations, the Internet, television, video streaming, cinemas, and newspapers or magazines. Among the students who reported going to these sources, 69.3% had seen e-cigarette marketing, and 81.7% had seen marketing for other tobacco products, including cigarettes.

SOURCE: Wang TW et al. MMWR Surveill Summ. 2019 Nov 6;68(12):1-22. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.ss6812a1.

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