E-cigarette dependence and cooling flavor use are linked among youth

E-cigarette flavors that produce cooling sensations may reduce nicotine harshness and enhance appeal among youth. While previous research has shown that use of cooling flavors is associated with more frequent vaping among youth, it is unknown whether the same holds true for e-cigarette dependence. T...

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Veröffentlicht in:Drug and alcohol dependence 2024-07, Vol.260, p.111325, Article 111325
Hauptverfasser: Li, Wei, Davis, Danielle R., Kong, Grace, Bold, Krysten W., Morean, Meghan E., Camenga, Deepa, Sharma, Akshika, Lee, Juhan, Krishnan-Sarin, Suchitra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:E-cigarette flavors that produce cooling sensations may reduce nicotine harshness and enhance appeal among youth. While previous research has shown that use of cooling flavors is associated with more frequent vaping among youth, it is unknown whether the same holds true for e-cigarette dependence. This study examines the relationship between cooling flavor use and e-cigarette dependence among youth accounting for vaping frequency. In Fall 2022, a survey was conducted among Connecticut high school students to assess past-month nicotine e-cigarette use, ever use of cooling flavors, cooling flavor types (e.g., fruit-cooling), and e-cigarette dependence. Analyses were restricted to those with past-month nicotine and nicotine-free e-cigarette use and complete data (n=204). Multivariable linear regressions were run to examine the association between cooling flavor use and e-cigarette dependence, adjusting for demographics, e-cigarette use characteristics, and other tobacco product use. 78.4% of the sample used cooling e-cigarette flavors, with 55.0% using mint-cooling flavors and 52.5% using fruit-cooling flavors. Regression results observed that cooling flavor use was associated with higher e-cigarette dependence (ꞵ=1.53, SE=0.63, p=0.017), with those who used cooling flavors having higher e-cigarette dependence than those who did not (M=5.78 [SD=5.33] vs. 2.84 [3.19]). Our results suggest that cooling flavor use is significantly associated with e-cigarette dependence among youth. While regulations often target menthol flavor, tobacco control agencies should consider restricting any flavor that can produce cooling sensations, even if they are not traditional menthol products, as cooling flavors is associated with youth e-cigarette dependence. •The most used cooling flavors in CT youth are mint (55.0%) and fruit (52.5%).•Cooling flavor use is associated with higher e-cigarette dependence scores.•Considering flavors that may be exempt from menthol regulation but produce similar cooling sensations is important.
ISSN:0376-8716
1879-0046
1879-0046
DOI:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111325