吸电子烟的青少年:了解青少年电子烟使用者的心理特征和兴趣,为健康宣传活动提供信息。

IF 2.1 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Tobacco Use Insights Pub Date : 2020-07-30 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1177/1179173X20945695
Carolyn Ann Stalgaitis, Mayo Djakaria, Jeffrey Washington Jordan
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:青少年吸电子烟的人数持续上升,但除了人口统计数据外,人们对青少年吸电子烟的情况知之甚少。有效的干预需要更深入地了解青少年电子烟使用者的心理和兴趣,以促进有针对性的宣传活动。方法:我们分析了2017-2018年来自弗吉尼亚州高中生的加权横断面在线调查数据(N = 1594),以确定和描述吸电子烟的青少年亚群。参与者报告了30天的电子烟使用情况,对5种同伴群体(另类、乡村、嘻哈、主流、流行)的认同,社会优先级,对个人价值观声明的认同,社交媒体和智能手机的使用,以及电视和活动偏好。我们使用卡方分析和后续测试来比较同龄人群体的吸电子烟率和频率,以确定高风险人群,并使用二元和多项逻辑回归模型来确认相关性,同龄人群体得分预测吸电子烟,控制人口统计学。然后,我们使用卡方检验和t检验来描述高风险同伴群体和这些群体中当前电子烟用户的心理特征、媒体使用和兴趣。结果:在有嘻哈同伴群体认同的人群中,吸电子烟的比例最高(25.4%),其次是流行(21.3%)。更强的同伴群体认同感与两种人群当前吸电子烟的几率增加有关,两种人群吸电子烟的时间都在1到19天之间,而只吸嘻哈的人吸电子烟的时间在20到30天之间。与其他同龄人和非用户相比,嘻哈青年和流行青年以及当前的电子烟用户报告了更大的社会优先级,并同意与社交和时尚相关的价值观。嘻哈和流行的年轻人和当前的电子烟用户报告说,他们大量使用Instagram和Snapchat,以及独特的电视节目和活动偏好。结论:嘻哈和流行青少年最有可能吸电子烟,应该是预防电子烟运动的优先受众。调查结果应指导通过精心设计的媒体战略开展有针对性的卫生宣传运动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Vaping Teenager: Understanding the Psychographics and Interests of Adolescent Vape Users to Inform Health Communication Campaigns.

The Vaping Teenager: Understanding the Psychographics and Interests of Adolescent Vape Users to Inform Health Communication Campaigns.

The Vaping Teenager: Understanding the Psychographics and Interests of Adolescent Vape Users to Inform Health Communication Campaigns.

The Vaping Teenager: Understanding the Psychographics and Interests of Adolescent Vape Users to Inform Health Communication Campaigns.

Background: Adolescent vaping continues to rise, yet little is known about teen vape users beyond demographics. Effective intervention requires a deeper understanding of the psychographics and interests of adolescent vape users to facilitate targeted communication campaigns.

Methods: We analyzed the 2017-2018 weighted cross-sectional online survey data from Virginia high school students (N = 1594) to identify and describe subgroups of adolescents who vaped. Participants reported 30-day vape use, identification with 5 peer crowds (Alternative, Country, Hip Hop, Mainstream, Popular), social prioritization, agreement with personal values statements, social media and smartphone use, and television and event preferences. We compared vaping rates and frequency by peer crowd using a chi-square analysis with follow-up testing to identify higher-risk crowds and confirmed associations using binary and multinomial logistic regression models with peer crowd scores predicting vaping, controlling for demographics. We then used chi-square and t tests to describe the psychographics, media use, and interests of higher-risk peer crowds and current vape users within those crowds.

Results: Any current vaping was the highest among those with Hip Hop peer crowd identification (25.4%), then Popular (21.3%). Stronger peer crowd identification was associated with increased odds of any current vaping for both crowds, vaping on 1 to 19 days for both crowds, and vaping on 20 to 30 days for Hip Hop only. Compared with other peer crowds and non-users, Hip Hop and Popular youth and current vape users reported greater social prioritization and agreement with values related to being social and fashionable. Hip Hop and Popular youth and current vape users reported heavy Instagram and Snapchat use, as well as unique television show and event preferences.

Conclusions: Hip Hop and Popular adolescents are most likely to vape and should be priority audiences for vaping prevention campaigns. Findings should guide the development of targeted health communication campaigns delivered via carefully designed media strategies.

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来源期刊
Tobacco Use Insights
Tobacco Use Insights PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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