Litcius/Paper detail

E-cigarette attitudes and use in a sample of Australians aged 15–30 years

Simone Pettigrew, Mia Miller, Joseph Alvin Santos, Thout Sudhir Raj, Katherine Brown, Alexandra Jones

2023Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to explore e-cigarette exposure and patterns of vaping in a sample of Australians aged 15-30 years to provide insight into potential means of minimising young people's harm from e-cigarettes. METHODS: A national sample of 1,006 Australians aged 15-30 years completed an online survey. Demographics, use of tobacco and vaping products, motivations for use, how e-cigarettes are obtained, where they are used, intentions to use among nonusers, exposure to others' vaping behaviours, exposure to e-cigarette advertising, perceptions of harms associated with e-cigarettes, and minors' perceptions of ease of access were assessed. RESULTS: Almost half of respondents reported being either current users (14%) or having tried/used e-cigarettes in the past (33%). Factors positively associated with ever use were being a past or present user of tobacco cigarettes and number of friends who vape. Stronger perceptions of addictiveness were inversely associated with use. CONCLUSIONS: Despite current restrictions on e-cigarette availability and promotion, the results suggest many young people in Australia may be exposed to e-cigarettes in multiple ways. IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH: Additional efforts appear to be needed to control e-cigarette availability and promotion to prevent young people's exposure to vaping.

Topics & Concepts

DemographicsHarmPromotion (chess)Environmental healthPerceptionMedicineSample (material)Electronic cigaretteTobacco controlTobacco useCigarette smokingDemographyYoung adultPsychologyGerontologyPublic healthSocial psychologyPopulationPolitical scienceNursingSociologyInternal medicineNeuroscienceLawPathologyChemistryPoliticsChromatographySmoking Behavior and CessationSexuality, Behavior, and TechnologyBehavioral Health and Interventions