4.2 Article

Aided recall of The Real Cost e-cigarette prevention advertisements among a nationally representative sample of adolescents

Journal

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE REPORTS
Volume 28, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2022.101864

Keywords

E-cigarette; Vaping; Tobacco; Adolescent; Teen; Campaign

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [R01CA246600]
  2. FDA Center for Tobacco Products (CTP)
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [T32ES007018]

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This study examined the aided recall of e-cigarette prevention ads among US adolescents and identified potential differences based on participant characteristics. The majority of the participants recalled at least one of the "The Real Cost" e-cigarette prevention ads, but there were variations in recall rates for different ads and among different demographic groups, with higher recall among Black adolescents and those who used social media at medium or high frequencies.
E-cigarette use among youth remains a significant public health concern. In 2018, The Real Cost campaign began disseminating messages about the harms of vaping, primarily using digital media. We sought to determine the prevalence of aided recall of The Real Cost e-cigarette prevention ads and identify potential differences by participant characteristics. Participants were a nationally representative sample of adolescents living in United States (US) households recruited by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago's AmeriSpeak panel in September and October of 2020. A total of 623 adolescents completed the survey. Analyses were weighted to represent the distribution of youth in the US, and effect sizes for individual characteristics were estimated using an adjusted marginalized two-part model. Seventy-one percent of adolescents recalled at least one of the five The Real Cost e-cigarette prevention ads, with individual ad recall ranging from a low of 38.8% (for Magic) to a high of 50.1% (for Narrative). Adjusted estimates of aided recall identified significantly higher recall among Black adolescents and those that used social media at medium or high frequencies (p < 0.05). Results support ongoing efforts by the FDA to reach youth with e-cigarette prevention messages using primarily digital media.

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