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J Am Coll Health 2017 Feb-Mar;65(2):103-11

College students' perceptions of risk and addictiveness of e-cigarettes and cigarettes.

Cooper M, Loukas A, Harrell MB, Perry CL

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As conventional cigarette use is declining, electronic cigarette ("e-cigarette") use is rising and is especially high among college students. Few studies examine dual use of e-cigarettes and cigarettes among this population. This study explores the relationship between dual and exclusive e-cigarette / cigarette use and perceptions of harm and addictiveness of both products. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional analysis of data from students attending 24 colleges in Texas (n=5,482). Multinomial logistic regression was employed to test the association between current e-cigarette / cigarette use and perceived harm and addictiveness of both products. Three tobacco groups were included: cigarette only users, e-cigarette only users, and dual users. RESULTS: Dual users reported lower perceived harm of e-cigarettes most consistently (p<0.001, all comparisons). Perceived harm of cigarettes was significantly lower among cigarette only and dual users only, compared to non-users (p<0.001, all comparisons). Compared to non-users, all three groups reported significantly lower perceived addictiveness of e-cigarettes (p<0.001, all comparisons). The same finding was observed for perceived addictiveness of cigarettes, though findings were less consistent for the e-cigarette only group (p<0.02, all comparisons except one). CONCLUSION: Findings demonstrate that among college students, perceptions of harm and addictiveness of e-cigarettes are lower than those for conventional cigarettes. For both products, perceptions of harm and addictiveness were lower among exclusive and dual users, compared to non-users.


Category: Journal Article
PubMed ID: #27805472 DOI: 10.1080/07448481.2016.1254638
PubMed Central ID: #PMC5278646
Includes FDA Authors from Scientific Area(s): Tobacco
Entry Created: 2017-11-05 Entry Last Modified: 2017-11-26
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