Harm Perceptions of Intermittent Tobacco Product Use Among U.S. Youth, 2016.
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Teresa W. Wang, Katrina F. Trivers, Kristy L. Marynak, Erin Keely O’Brien, Alexander Persoskie, Sherry T. Liu, and Brian A. King.
Harm Perceptions of Intermittent Tobacco Product Use Among U.S. Youth, 2016.
Journal of Adolescent Health. 2018. Advance Release.
We aimed to describe U.S. youth harm perceptions of intermittent tobacco use. Using data from the 2016 National Youth Tobacco Survey of U.S. students (grades 6–12; N = 20,675), we examined prevalence and correlates of all respondents’ perceived harm of using four different tobacco products on “some days but not every day.” Associations between current (past 30-day) use and harm perceptions were assessed using multivariable regression. Perceiving that intermittent use causes “no” or “little” harm was 9.7% for cigarettes, 12.0% for smokeless tobacco, 18.7% for hookah, and 37.5% for e-cigarettes. Compared with those who reported “a lot” of harm, youth with lower harm perceptions were more likely to report current use. One in ten youth perceived intermittent cigarette smoking as causing “little” or “no” harm; this perception was higher among current users. Efforts to educate youth about the risks of even intermittent tobacco product use could reduce misperceptions of harm.
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