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1.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 2024 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38989961

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Past research examining the relationship between exposure to online e-cigarette marketing and e-cigarette-related attitudes and behaviors has relied on unaided recall measures that may suffer from self-report bias. To date, few studies have presented participants with e-cigarette marketing stimuli and assessed recognition. This study examined the associations between recognition of online e-cigarette marketing stimuli and e-cigarette-related attitudes and behaviors among young adults in California. METHODS: A non-probability representative sample of young adults (ages 18-24; N=1500) living in California completed an online survey assessing their recognition of online e-cigarette marketing stimuli, including image-based (i.e., Instagram, email) and audiovisual (i.e., YouTube, TikTok) promotions, and positive e-cigarette-related attitudes (e.g., appeal of e-cigarettes) and behaviors (e.g., e-cigarette use). Adjusted and weighted logistic regression analyses were used. RESULTS: 79.0% (n=1185) of young adults, including 78.1% (n=310/397) of participants under 21 years old, recognized online e-cigarette marketing. Participants who reported recognition of stimuli, compared with those who did not, had greater odds of reporting appeal of e-cigarettes (AOR=2.26, 95% CI=1.65-3.09) and e-cigarette purchase intentions (AOR=1.66, 95% CI=1.13-2.43) among all participants, and susceptibility to use e-cigarettes among never users (AOR=2.29, 95% CI=1.59-3.29). CONCLUSIONS: Young adults in California recognized audiovisual and image-based online e-cigarette marketing. Such recognition may lead to positive e-cigarette-related attitudes and behavioral intentions, especially among never users. Future research should examine the causal relationship between the associations found in this study. Findings may inform the development and evaluation of psychometrically valid measures of online e-cigarette marketing exposures. IMPLICATIONS: Recognition of online e-cigarette marketing stimuli was associated with greater odds of reporting appeal and benefits of e-cigarettes, purchase intentions, and lifetime e-cigarette use among all participants, and susceptibility to use e-cigarettes among never users. These findings may motivate the development and evaluation of psychometrically valid measures of online e-cigarette marketing exposures.

3.
Addiction ; 2024 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38923723

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: E-cigarette marketing exposure on social media influences perceptions; however, limited knowledge exists regarding marketing features attracting the most visual attention. This study examined visual attention to features of social media marketing for disposable e-cigarettes and related product perceptions. DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Participants viewed 32 disposable marketing post images from social media (Instagram) using computer-based eye-tracking technology to assess standardized attention metrics of marketing features. They then completed a survey assessing positive product perceptions. The study took place in New Jersey, USA, June-September 2022, comprising young adults (aged 18-29) who do not use tobacco (n = 72) or who smoke cigarettes (n = 42). MEASUREMENTS: We examined associations between 14 marketing features (e.g. product package, personal item, fruit/candy descriptor, social media account) and standardized attention metrics of dwell time (fixation duration) and entry time (time to first fixation). Then, we assessed attention metrics for each feature in relation to positive product perceptions (appeal and positive use expectancy). FINDINGS: Among all participants, dwell time was the longest for the product descriptor [marginal means (MM) = 1.77; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.69, 1.86], social media account (MM = 1.76; 95% CI = 1.67, 1.85) and fruit/candy descriptor features (MM = 1.56; 95% CI = 1.41, 1.70); entry time was the shortest for the social media account (MM = 0.35; 95% CI = 0.26, 0.46), personal item (MM = 0.36; 95% CI = 0.17, 0.56) and human model features (MM = 0.40; 95% CI = 0.08, 0.72). Two use status groups had comparable dwell and entry times, except for the product descriptor feature. Longer dwell time for the product package feature increased positive product perceptions among both use status groups [regression coefficient (ß) = 0.44 and 2.61]. Longer dwell time for fruit/candy descriptor (ß = 1.80) and price promotion features (ß = 4.04) increased positive product perceptions among those who smoke. CONCLUSIONS: US young adults appear to be particularly visually engaged by disposable e-cigarette marketing that uses social media account features (account profile pictures, information about the products marketed and relevant hashtags) and features enhancing the products' personal relatability. Disposable product packages, fruit/candy descriptors and price promotions may increase the influence of social media marketing among various use status groups.

5.
Psychol Addict Behav ; 2024 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38483523

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Sexual and gender minority individuals are more likely to use tobacco and cannabis and have lower cigarette cessation. This study examined cannabis use associations with daily cigarettes smoked in sexual and gender minority individuals before and during a quit attempt. METHOD: Participants included dual smoking same-sex/gender couples from California that were willing to make a quit attempt (individual n = 205, 68.3% female sex). Participants reported baseline past 30-day cannabis use and number of cigarettes smoked and cannabis use (yes/no) during 35 nightly surveys. Individuals with current cannabis use reported baseline cannabis use and/or nightly survey cannabis use. Multilevel linear models predicted number of cigarettes smoked by cannabis use. RESULTS: Number of cigarettes decreased from before to during a quit attempt, but this decrease was smaller in individuals with current cannabis use compared to no current cannabis use (p < .001). In individuals with current cannabis use, number of cigarettes smoked was greater on days with cannabis use (p < .001). Furthermore, cannabis use that day increased overall number of cigarettes in those with relatively high overall cannabis use but only during a quit attempt in those with relatively low cannabis use (Within-Subject Cannabis Use × Between-Subject Cannabis Use × Quit Attempt interaction; p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Sexual and gender minority individuals with cannabis and cigarette use may have a harder time quitting smoking than those who do not use cannabis. For those with cannabis use, guidance on not using cannabis during a quit attempt may improve cigarette cessation outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

6.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 2024 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38430545

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Online e-cigarette retailers use email communications to promote products directly to consumers, which may facilitate e-cigarette use. Little is known about the content of these emails. As such, this study collected emails from online e-cigarette retailers in California to conduct a content analysis. METHODS: This study included 13 online e-cigarette retailers in California using Yelp. To be included in the study, e-cigarette retailers needed a live website, physical retail location (i.e., vape shop), and e-cigarettes available for purchase online. The research team entered each website and signed up (if possible) for an email newsletter. Data were collected from the Gmail Application Programming Interface over a 1-year study period (11/01/21-11/01/22). Members of the research team coded emails for the presence of e-cigarettes, other products, flavors, marketing categories, and promotional activities, among other variables. RESULTS: 749 promotional emails (2.1 avg/per day) were received over the 1-year study period. Second-generation e-cigarettes (n=581, 77.6%) were the most observed product in emails followed by disposable e-cigarettes (n=391, 52.2%). The most common flavor profile was fruit/sweet/liquor (n=424, 56.6%). Emails included links to social media pages (n=366, 48.9%). Online coupons were found in 53.1% (n=398) of the emails. Age warnings were displayed in 8.0% (n=60) of the emails. CONCLUSIONS: E-cigarette retailers' emails promoted new products, flavors, and contained promotional discounts. Future research should examine the impact of exposure to such emails on e-cigarette-related attitudes and behaviors. IMPLICATIONS: Findings from this study may help inform prevention programs and interventions focused on increasing tobacco-related digital media literacy (i.e., evaluate tobacco advertising messages on digital media) among gender and ethnic minorities. Future research should examine if exposure to email marketing is causally linked with e-cigarette use among gender and ethnic minorities.

7.
Prev Sci ; 25(2): 380-391, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37962708

ABSTRACT

Gun violence in the USA is a documented public health crisis. Publicly accessible data from Twitter posts can be used to rapidly capture and describe the public's recent conversations about guns. Because these gun-related conversations change rapidly, it is important to provide regularly updated information on them. Twitter posts containing gun-related terms were obtained from January 1, 2022 to June 30, 2022. To understand topics of gun-related tweets (N = 449,492), topic modeling was performed with Top2Vec. Gun ownership control, concern about gun safety and its impact on children and schools, and the Second Amendment were major areas of the gun-related discourse on Twitter. Several identified topics in this study were a consequence of the study period, including "Discourse on Capitol Riots," and "Wartime and Military Use of Guns," with the latter topic containing conversations about the Russia-Ukraine War. Conversations around the influence of the National Rifle Association (NRA) on gun policies and pro-gun ownership perspectives were also part of the public discourse. The intersection between alcohol, substance use, and gun use was infrequently observed. Findings suggest that gun-related conversations in social media such as Twitter can inform public health researchers.


Subject(s)
Firearms , Gun Violence , Social Media , Child , Humans , Communication , Public Health , Gun Violence/prevention & control
8.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 26(4): 421-426, 2024 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37712553

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Social media data have been used to describe tobacco industry marketing practices, user experiences with tobacco, and youth-oriented protobacco content. OBJECTIVE: Examine the extent to which tobacco-related social media research is cited in government policy documents. SEARCH METHODS: Peer-reviewed tobacco-related social media studies were searched for on Web of Science, PubMed, and other databases from 2004 to 2022. The DOI number for each identified article was then used to search the Overton database to find policy documents citing such research. A secondary, manual search of national and international governmental agency websites was also conducted. SELECTION CRITERIA: Documents were included in this study if they were tobacco-related, written in English, cited social media research in the document text and reference section, and were published by a governmental office or agency. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: The analytic sample consisted of (n = 38) government policy documents, and were coded for content themes, agency type, document type, and subsequent citations. MAIN RESULTS: When this research was utilized, it was often in the context of highlighting tobacco industry marketing practices, bringing attention to an issue (eg, youth e-cigarette use), and/or describing how social media platforms can be used as a data source to understand tobacco-related attitudes and behaviors. Agencies that often cited this research were the WHO, FDA, and CDC. The document types included research reports, policy recommendations, industry guidance, legal complaints, and practice-based recommendations. CONCLUSIONS: Tobacco-related social media research has been utilized by government agencies in the last decade to guide the policy process. IMPLICATIONS: Tobacco-related social media research has been used in government policy documents to detail tobacco industry marketing and bring attention to youth exposure to protobacco content online. Continued surveillance of social media may be necessary to track the changing tobacco landscape.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Social Media , Tobacco Industry , Government , Policy , Tobacco Use
9.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 26(4): 503-507, 2024 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37791822

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Oral nicotine gum such as LUCY, which comes in colorful packaging, mimicking traditional chewing gum, is becoming popular. Many brands of gum have not been approved by the FDA for smoking cessation. This study examined public discourse about, including sentiment toward, oral nicotine gum on Twitter. METHODS: We used Twitter's Streaming Application Programming Interface to collect data from January 1, 2021, to December 21, 2021, using "nicotine gum" and/or "#nicotinegum" search terms (N = 19 171 unique tweets were collected). We used an inductive approach to become familiar with the data, generated a codebook, and conducted a content analysis on (n = 2152) tweets. RESULTS: Cessation (n = 716, 33.3%), personal experience (n = 370, 17.2%), and addiction to gum (n = 135, 6.3%) were the most prevalent themes. Cessation tweets primarily discussed cigarette smoking cessation (n = 418, 58.4% of cessation tweets) and successful cessation experiences (n = 155, 21.6%). Other identified themes pertained to using nicotine gum for cognitive enhancement or catching a "buzz" (n = 102, 4.7%), marketing (n = 98, 4.6%), using nicotine gum with other substances (n = 90, 4.2%), and adverse effects (n = 63, 2.9%). Sentiment analysis results revealed that 675 (44.2%) tweets were categorized as neutral, 605 (39.6%) tweets were classified as positive, and 248 tweets (16.2%) were negative. CONCLUSIONS: About one-third of tweets in our corpus mentioned nicotine gum in the context of smoking cessation. Most nicotine gum-related posts conveyed positive and neutral sentiments. Future studies should consider adding novel nicotine gum-specific search terms as well as exploring other social media platforms to gain more insights about these products. IMPLICATIONS: Our findings suggest that Twitter has the potential to track and facilitate conversations between those seeking cigarette cessation advice and those who have successfully quit tobacco by using nicotine gum. Monitoring of promotional content from nicotine gum companies is needed to ensure these products are not appealing to youth and nonusers of tobacco.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Nicotine Chewing Gum , Social Media , Tobacco Products , Humans , Chewing Gum , Nicotine/adverse effects
10.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 26(4): 413-420, 2024 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37795944

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Tobacco researchers have used social media data to examine tobacco industry marketing practices (eg, influencers), and to document user experience with tobacco products. This study summarized the literature that analyzed tobacco-related social media data, including domain, social media platform, tobacco product type, and themes of findings, among other variables. AIMS AND METHODS: PubMed, PsycINFO, Web of Science, and Communication Source were searched between 2004 and 2022. Peer-reviewed articles were included if they were written in English, included at least one tobacco-related term, and one social media-related term, and analyzed a social media post. Two coders screened all-titles and abstracts. The final sample consisted of (n = 255) articles. Studies were coded for domain, social media platform, tobacco product type, data source, type of data, coding and analytic method, and presence of validation procedure, among other variables. RESULTS: A total of 10 504 820 581 tobacco-related social media posts were assessed across 255 studies. User experience (54.1%) and promotion (23.1%) were the most researched domains. Researchers used data from Twitter the most (42.7%). Text (43.1%) was the most common type of data analyzed. Thematic analysis (80.8%) was the most common analytic technique. Themes of findings from content analyses often pertained to the health effects of tobacco use (61.0%) and promotion (44.2%). CONCLUSIONS: Researchers have analyzed billions of tobacco-related social media posts to describe user experience with, and promotions related to, tobacco products like e-cigarettes on platforms like Twitter. Future research may examine tobacco-related social media data from newer platforms like TikTok. IMPLICATIONS: Real-time surveillance of tobacco-related content on social media can keep the tobacco control community abreast of tobacco industry promotional strategies, user experience with tobacco products, and perceived health effects of tobacco use. A framework may be developed to establish best-practices for social media data collection and analysis, including strategies to identify posts from bot accounts and validate methodological approaches used in thematic analysis.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Social Media , Tobacco Industry , Tobacco Products , Marketing/methods
11.
JAMA Netw Open ; 6(12): e2348749, 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38127352

ABSTRACT

This survey study assesses whether the online purchase attempt completion rate of e-cigarettes changed after passage of California Senate Bill 793.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Humans , California
12.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 2023 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37942524

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Twitter data has been used to surveil public sentiment about tobacco products, however, most tobacco-related Twitter research has been conducted with English-language posts. There is a gap in the literature on tobacco-related discussions on Twitter in languages other than English. This study summarized tobacco-related discussions in Spanish on Twitter. METHODS: A set of Spanish terms reflecting electronic cigarettes (e.g., cigarillos electrónicos), cigarettes (e.g., "pitillo"), and cigars (e.g., "cigaro") were identified. A content analysis of tweets (n=1,352) drawn from 2021 was performed to examine themes and sentiment. An initial codebook was developed in English then translated to Spanish and then translated back to English by a bilingual (Spanish and English) member of the research team. Two bilingual members of the research team coded the tweets into themes and sentiment. RESULTS: Themes in the tweets included 1) product promotion (n=168, 12.4%), 2) health warnings (n=161, 11.9%), 3) tobacco use (n=136, 10.1%), 4) health benefits of vaping (n=58, 4.3%), 5) cannabis use (n=50, 3.7%), 6) cessation (n=47, 3.5%), 7) addiction (n=33, 2.4%), 8) policy (n=27, 2.0%), and 9) polysubstance use (n=12, 0.9%). Neutral (n=955, 70.6%) was the most common category of sentiment observed in the data. CONCLUSIONS: Tobacco products are discussed in multiple languages on Twitter and can be summarized by bilingual research teams. Future research should determine if Spanish-speaking individuals are frequently exposed to pro-tobacco content on social media and if such exposure increases susceptibility to use tobacco among never users or sustained use among current users. IMPLICATIONS: Spanish-language pro-tobacco content exists on Twitter, which has implications for Spanish-speaking individuals who may be exposed to this content. Spanish-language pro-tobacco-related posts may help normalize tobacco use among Spanish-speaking populations. As a result, anti-tobacco tweets in Spanish may be necessary to counter areas of the online environment that can be considered pro-tobacco.

13.
Tob Control ; 2023 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37643863

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) brands and vendors use websites to promote pro-tobacco messages that may increase susceptibility to use e-cigarettes among never users or help sustain continued e-cigarette use among current users. E-cigarette website marketing is lightly regulated, and little is known about promotional strategies used on e-cigarette companies' websites. This study conducted a content analysis of website marketing from leading e-cigarette companies selling products in California. METHODS: This study identified 20 e-cigarette vendors and 6 e-cigarette brands that had products available for purchase online in California. Two coders visited 26 websites between 06 February 2022 and 17 April 2022. Websites were coded for marketing themes, promotional and interactive content, availability of flavoured e-cigarette products, presence of health warnings, and reference to tobacco control policies. RESULTS: Marketing themes related to physical health benefits of e-cigarette use were found on 50.0% of the websites. 57.7% of the websites had sales/discounts/coupons. 65.4% of the websites had fruit-flavoured disposable e-cigarettes, while 73.1% of the websites had fruit-flavoured e-liquids available for purchase. 69.2% of the websites allowed users to sign up for email newsletters, and 88.9% of such websites did not require users to create an age-verified account to receive email newsletters. CONCLUSIONS: Findings from this study can be used to inform statewide regulations of promotional communications found on e-cigarette companies' websites and encourage enforcement of age-verification procedures. This may help reduce susceptibility to use, or continued use of, e-cigarette products among price-sensitive populations, such as adolescents and young adults.

14.
Subst Use Misuse ; 58(8): 975-980, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37086005

ABSTRACT

Background: Puff Bar has rapidly captured a large proportion of the disposable e-cigarette market. To stay abreast of the rapidly changing e-cigarette-product landscape, researchers have turned to social media platforms to monitor e-cigarette-related discussions and marketing trends. TikTok is the latest social media platform to capture the attention of adolescents and young adults; however, e-cigarette-related research using TikTok is limited. Objectives: This study examined Puff Bar-related posts on TikTok to identify themes and user engagement. Methods: Data were collected by scraping publicly available TikTok posts that contained the hashtag #puffplus, between January 31, 2020 and May 4, 2021 (n = 581). The research team used an inductive approach to identify 19 themes from the data. User engagement with posts including the number of likes, shares, plays, and comments was also collected. Results: The most prevalent themes included Music at 75.39% (438/581), followed by Flavors at 51.64% (300/581), Youth/Young Adults at 42.86% (249/581), Tobacco Use at 41.14% (239/581), Nicotine Concentration at 35.11% (204/581), Humor at 19.45% (113/581) and Product Review at 19.1% (111/581). Cessation 1.38% (8/581) and Health Warnings 2.58% (15/581) were two themes rarely observed but commonly engaged with by TikTok users. Conclusions: Health communication strategists should prepare to address TikTok's popularity to combat its contribution to the online e-cigarette environment. Future research should determine the impact of exposure to Puff Bar-related content on TikTok on adolescents' and young adults' attitudes and behaviors.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Social Media , Tobacco Products , Adolescent , Young Adult , Humans , Nicotine , Tobacco Use
15.
Exp Clin Psychopharmacol ; 31(6): 1032-1038, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36757963

ABSTRACT

e-Cigarette companies use cartoon images to market their products, and exposure to this marketing strategy may lead to increased risk for adolescent e-cigarette use. This study examined the effects of cartoon marketing image exposure on perceived expectations of benefits and risks of e-cigarette use, and willingness to buy e-cigarette-related products in the future, among adolescents with and without a history of e-cigarette use. To accomplish this, participants completed an online survey experiment, during which they were randomly assigned to view pictures of e-cigarette products with cartoon or noncartoon packaging, followed by questionnaires about wanting to buy e-cigarettes, and perceived benefits and risks of e-cigarette use. Participants, a sample of Southern California high school students (ninth to 11th grade; N = 1,376), completed the study from September 2021 to November 2021. Overall, 27% of participants had used an e-cigarette or other tobacco product at least once in their lifetime (ever user). Thirty-six percent of participants never used e-cigarettes or other tobacco products but were considered to be susceptible to using e-cigarettes in the future (susceptible-never user). Thirty-seven percent of participants never used e-cigarettes or other tobacco products and were considered insusceptible to using e-cigarettes in the future (insusceptible-never user). There were no significant differences between image exposure groups (cartoon, no cartoon) on demographic variables (age, gender, race/ethnicity), lifetime e-cigarette use, or susceptibility to use in the future. Exposure to e-cigarette-related cartoon-based marketing produced lower perceived e-cigarette-related risks in insusceptible-never users. Exposure to e-cigarette marketing with cartoon images decreases the perceived harmfulness of e-cigarettes, which can increase adolescents' intentions to try e-cigarettes. Curbing adolescent e-cigarette use is a national public health priority. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Tobacco Products , Vaping , Humans , Adolescent , Marketing/methods , Surveys and Questionnaires
16.
JAMA Pediatr ; 177(3): 221-222, 2023 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36648930

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint discusses the need for health promotion programs and interventions to bolster tobacco-related digital media literacy among adolescents, young adults, parents, teachers, and public health organizations.


Subject(s)
Health Literacy , Nicotiana , Humans , Internet , Literacy
17.
Health Educ Behav ; 50(5): 677-682, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36680338

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: E-cigarette companies use YouTube to foster brand awareness, market their products, and interact with current and future tobacco users. However, research on the official YouTube channels of e-cigarette companies is limited. This study determined the themes of, and degree of user engagement with, videos posted to the official channels of e-cigarette companies on YouTube. METHODS: Data were collected from the official YouTube channels of seven e-cigarette companies by scraping (i.e., electronically copying) the videos. The earliest video was posted on October 10, 2013, and the most recent video was posted on April 22, 2021 (n = 260). An inductive approach was used to identify themes in the data. User engagement with posts including number of likes, dislikes, and comments were also collected. RESULTS: Prevalent themes included branding (n = 250 of 260 videos, 96%), youth use (n = 222, 85%), and tobacco use (n = 210, 81%), while less common themes included misleading health statements (n = 4, 2%), personal choice (n = 4, 2%), and antitobacco (n = 2, 1%). Videos that contained the themes testimonial, product design features, and instructional received the highest mean number of likes. Videos that contained the themes antitobacco, cessation, and testimonial received the highest mean number of dislikes. The 260 videos in this study were collectively viewed 6,619,700 times as of May 5, 2021. CONCLUSIONS: Videos from the official YouTube channels of seven e-cigarette companies often focused on branding and user experience but rarely mentioned cessation. While videos about cessation were rare, they received the second highest mean number of dislikes. Future research should assess the impact of exposure to e-cigarette-related content on YouTube and e-cigarette-related attitudes and behaviors.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Social Media , Tobacco Products , Adolescent , Humans , Tobacco Use , Video Recording
19.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 25(5): 962-966, 2023 04 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36534973

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned characterizing flavors in cigarettes in 2009, this initial ban exempted menthol. After examining numerous reports on the adverse health effects of menthol cigarettes, the FDA proposed a menthol ban in April 2022. This study analyzed Twitter data to describe public reaction to this announcement. AIMS AND METHODS: Posts containing the word "menthol" and/or "#menthol" were collected from April 21, 2022 to May 5, 2022 from Twitter's Streaming Application Programming Interface (API). A random sampling procedure supplied 1041 tweets for analysis. Following an inductive approach to content analysis, posts were classified into one or more of 11 themes. RESULTS: Posts discussed the FDA announcement (n = 153, 14.7%), racial discrimination (n = 101, 9.7%), distrust in government (n = 67, 6.4%), inconsistencies between policies (n = 52, 5.0%), public health benefits (n = 42, 4%), freedom of choice (n = 22, 2.1%), and health equity (n = 21, 2.0%). Posts contained misinformation (n = 20, 1.9%), and discussed the potential for illicit markets (n = 18, 1.7%) and the need for cessation support (n = 4, 0.4%). 541 (52.0%) tweets did not fit into any of the prescribed themes. CONCLUSIONS: Twitter posts with the word "menthol" commonly discussed distrust in government and mentioned racial discrimination. Findings demonstrated the possibility of near real-time Twitter monitoring of public opinion on a menthol ban. These data may be valuable for designing tobacco control health communication campaigns in the future. IMPLICATIONS: The U.S. FDA proposed a ban on menthol cigarettes in April 2022. This study's content analyzed Twitter posts over a 2-week period to understand the public's response to the proposed menthol ban. Twitter posts with the word "menthol" often discussed distrust in government and mentioned racial discrimination. Findings demonstrated the possibility of near real-time Twitter monitoring of public opinion of regulatory action. Findings underscore the need to educate the public about the potential health benefits of banning menthol from cigarettes, particularly for populations that experience tobacco-related health disparities.


Subject(s)
Social Media , Tobacco Products , United States , Humans , Menthol , Pharmaceutical Preparations , United States Food and Drug Administration
20.
Subst Use Misuse ; 58(2): 306-310, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36585016

ABSTRACT

Background: Memes, images or videos with text overlay that embody a concept or belief about the contemporary society, are endemic to Internet culture, are popular among youth and diffuse rapidly across social media platforms. E-cigarettes and vaping have grown in popularity in the era of Internet culture however there is little research describing the intersection of memes and vaping. This is an important gap in the literature as memes may be part of the broader online e-cigarette information landscape that can normalize vaping among young people. Memes could also point to emerging trends in product preferences. This study content analyzed memes to identify key themes, characters and vape products depicted therein. Methods: Data were drawn from a sub-reddit devoted to vaping-related memes. Memes were electronically copied from the forum to analyze (n = 527). Using an inductive approach, the research team identified 14 themes. Results: In-group communication (n = 202, 38.33%) was the most predominant theme followed by Critique of vaping regulations and public perceptions (n = 76, 14.42%), and Vape device modifications and hacks (n = 62, 11.76%). Memes included Cartoons (n = 124, 23.53%), Celebrities (n = 75, 14.23%), and Fictional characters (n = 53, 10.06%). Memes referenced Tanks or mods (n = 120, 22.77%), Component parts (n = 96, 18.22%) and E-liquids/Nicotine salts (n = 81, 15.37%). Conclusion: Memes referenced in-group communication and cartoons among other youth friendly images, raising concern about the potential to normalize vaping-related behaviors. Future research should monitor emerging vape devices and determine the impact of memes on attitudes and behaviors among adolescents and young adults. Implications: Given the popularity and reach of memes among youth, continuous monitoring of vaping-related memes may reveal aspects that may be addressed in vaping prevention campaigns.


Subject(s)
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems , Social Media , Tobacco Products , Vaping , Adolescent , Young Adult , Humans , Vaping/epidemiology , Nicotine
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