3.9 Article

Young Adult E-cigarette Use and Retail Exposure in 6 US Metropolitan Areas

Journal

TOBACCO REGULATORY SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 59-75

Publisher

TOBACCO REGULATORY SCIENCE GROUP
DOI: 10.18001/TRS.7.1.5

Keywords

tobacco control; tobacco policy; alternative tobacco products; e-cigarettes; retail marketing; point-of-sale

Funding

  1. US National Cancer Institute [R01CA215155-01A1, R01CA179422-01, R01CA239178-01A1]
  2. US National Institutes of Health/Fogarty International Center [1R01TW010664-01]
  3. US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/Fogarty International Center [D43ES030927-01]
  4. US National Institutes of Health [SC3GM122628, R01 CA190347]
  5. California Tobacco Related Disparities Research Program [27IP-0041, 28IP-0022S]
  6. US Department of Health and Human Services [3GM1226290FK0105-01-00]
  7. California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program Award (TRDRP Grant) [26IR-0016]
  8. National Cancer Institute and FDA Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) Award (NCI/FDA Grant) [U54CA180905]
  9. US National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparities [R01MD013901]
  10. NCI [5R01CA067850-17, 1R01CA217165, 1P01CA0225597]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study analyzed baseline survey data from 3006 young adults aged 18-34 in 6 metropolitan areas in 2018. Results showed that 37.7% of participants had used e-cigarettes in the past 30 days.
Objectives: Given the need to understand e-cigarette retail and its impact, we examined sociodemographic, tobacco and marijuana use, and e-cigarette retail experiences as correlates of (1) past 30-day e-cigarette use, (2) past 30-day advertising/media exposure, and (3) point-of-sale age verification among young adults. Methods: We analyzed baseline survey data (September-December, 2018) among 3006 young adults (ages 18-34) in 6 metropolitan areas (Atlanta, Boston, Minneapolis, Oklahoma City, San Diego, Seattle) in a 2-year longitudinal study. Results: In this sample (M-age = 24.6, 42.3% male, 71.6% white, 11.4% Hispanic), 37.7% (N = 1133) were past 30-day e-cigarette users; 68.6% (N = 2062; non-users: 66.0%, users: 72.9%) reported past 30-day e-cigarette-related advertising/media exposure. Among e-cigarette users, vape shops were the most common source of e-cigarettes (44.7%) followed by online (18.2%). Among users, 34.2% were almost always asked for age verification. In multilevel logistic regression, e-cigarette use and advertising/media exposure were correlated (and both correlated with being younger). E-cigarette use also correlated with other tobacco product and marijuana use (and being male and white). Infrequent age verification correlated with commonly purchasing e-cigarettes online (and being older and black). Conclusions: Increased efforts are needed to reduce young adult advertising/media exposure and increase retailer compliance among retailers, particularly online and vape shops.

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