The association of adolescent e-cigarette harm perception to advertising exposure and marketing type

Despite controversy over their possible health consequences, manufacturers of e-cigarettes employ a variety of marketing media to increase their popularity among adolescents. This study analyzed the relationship between adolescent e-cigarette harm perception and five types of e-cigarette advertising...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of public health = Archives belges de santé publique 2022-04, Vol.80 (1), p.114-114, Article 114
Hauptverfasser: Hung, Man, Spencer, Andrew, Goh, Clarissa, Hon, Eric S, Cheever, Val Joseph, Licari, Frank W, Moffat, Ryan, Raymond, Ben, Lipsky, Martin S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite controversy over their possible health consequences, manufacturers of e-cigarettes employ a variety of marketing media to increase their popularity among adolescents. This study analyzed the relationship between adolescent e-cigarette harm perception and five types of e-cigarette advertising exposures: social media, radio, billboard, newspaper, and television. This study used data from Wave 4.5 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study (PATH). PATH collects demographic data and interview individuals about issues pertaining to tobacco use, health outcomes, attitudes, and behaviors. This study applied factor analysis to three individual PATH harm perception items to develop a composite harm perception score. Using linear regression, the study explored the relationship of harm perception and participant responses to their recalled viewing of five different types (i.e., newspaper, radio, billboard, television and social media) of advertisements within the past 30 days. A second analysis explored if adjusting for exposure to anti-tobacco messaging and environmental factors such as family approval mitigated the association of harm perception and advertisement types. The study sample consisted of 12,570 (weighted N = 23,993,149) individuals aged 12 to 17 years old. Unadjusted past 30-day exposure to newspaper, radio, billboard, and social media advertising all correlated with a reduced harm perception, but only the associations for newspaper and social media were statistically significant (p
ISSN:0778-7367
2049-3258
2049-3258
DOI:10.1186/s13690-022-00867-6