Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
Center for Tobacco Control Research & Education, University of California, San Francisco.
JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Dec 1;3(12):e2027572. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.27572.
Understanding patterns of e-cigarette use and access during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is important because e-cigarettes may put users at risk for more severe respiratory effects and other health problems.
To examine whether underage youth and young adults who ever used e-cigarettes self-reported changes in access and use of e-cigarettes since the COVID-19 pandemic began.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A national, cross-sectional online survey study was conducted from May 6 to May 14, 2020. This sample of 4351 participants aged 13 to 24 years across the US included 2167 e-cigarette ever-users. Quota sampling was used to balance for age, sex, race/ethnicity, and 50% having ever used e-cigarettes.
Change in e-cigarette use (increase, decrease, quit, no change, and switch to another product) and access to e-cigarettes (easier or harder, and change in point-of-purchase) before and after the COVID-19 pandemic began, reasons for change, number of times e-cigarettes were used, nicotine dependence, and sociodemographic data.
This study focused on 2167 e-cigarette ever-users among 4351 participants who completed the survey. Among 2167 e-cigarette users, a total of 1442 were younger than 21 years and 725 were aged 21 years or older; 1397 were female (64.5%) and 438 identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer (20.2%). The survey completion rate was 40%. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, 1198 of 2125 e-cigarette users (56.4%) changed their use: 388 individuals (32.4%) quit, 422 individuals (35.3%) reduced the amount of nicotine, 211 individuals (17.6%) increased nicotine use, 94 individuals (7.8%) increased cannabis use, and 82 individuals (6.9%) switched to other products. Participants reported that not being able to go to vape shops and product unavailability were the reasons accessing e-cigarettes was difficult after the pandemic began. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, individuals reported purchasing from alternative retail stores (disposables, 150 of 632 [23.7%]; pod-based, 144 of 797 [18.1%]; and other e-cigarette, 125 of 560 [22.3%], ie, between 18.1% and 23.7%), purchasing online instead of retail (disposables, 115 of 632 [18.2%]; pod-based, 156 of 797 [19.6%]; and other e-cigarette, 111 of 560 [19.8%], ie, between 18.2% to 19.8%), and shifted to retail instead of online (disposables, 11 of 632 [1.7%]; pod-based, 17 of 797 [2.0%]; and other e-cigarette, 13 of 560 [2.3%], ie, between 1.7%-2.3%). Other individuals reported no change: from retail stores (disposables 262 of 632 [41.5%]; pod-based 344 of 797 [43.2%]; and other e-cigarette, 223 of 560 [39.8%], ie, between 39.8% and 43.2%) and online (disposables 94 of 632 [14.9%]; pod-based 136 of 797 [17.1%]; and other e-cigarette, 88 of 560 [15.8%], ie, between 14.9% and 17.1%). Underage youth reported e-cigarette deliveries from vape shops and/or dealers or friends who received such deliveries, and 63 of 229 (27.5%) self-reported accessing e-cigarettes without age verification. e-Cigarette users were 52% less likely to quit or reduce their use if they previously used e-cigarettes between 11 and 99 times (adjusted odds ratio, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.30-0.78), 68% less likely to quit if they previously used e-cigarettes more than 100 times (adjusted odds ratio, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.20-0.51), and 51% were less likely to quit if they were nicotine dependent (adjusted odds ratio, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.35-0.70).
During the COVID-19 pandemic, youth e-cigarette users reported changes in e-cigarette use, point-of-purchase, and ability to purchase e-cigarettes without age verification. The US Food and Drug Administration and local policy makers may find these data useful to inform policies to prevent e-cigarette sales to underage youth.
重要性:了解 2019 冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间电子烟的使用和获取模式很重要,因为电子烟可能使使用者面临更严重的呼吸道影响和其他健康问题。
目的:调查未成年和青年电子烟使用者自 COVID-19 大流行开始以来,报告的电子烟获取和使用情况是否发生变化。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项全国性的、横断面的在线调查研究,于 2020 年 5 月 6 日至 5 月 14 日进行。该样本包括美国年龄在 13 至 24 岁之间的 4351 名参与者,其中 2167 名曾使用过电子烟。使用配额抽样法平衡年龄、性别、种族/民族和 50%曾使用过电子烟的比例。
主要结果和措施:在 COVID-19 大流行开始前后,电子烟使用(增加、减少、戒烟、无变化和改用其他产品)和电子烟获取(更容易或更难,购买地点的变化)的变化情况、变化的原因、电子烟使用次数、尼古丁依赖程度以及社会人口统计学数据。
结果:本研究主要关注在 4351 名完成调查的参与者中,2167 名曾使用过电子烟的电子烟使用者。在 2167 名电子烟使用者中,共有 1442 人年龄小于 21 岁,725 人年龄为 21 岁或以上;1397 人为女性(64.5%),438 人为女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者、酷儿(20.2%)。调查完成率为 40%。自 COVID-19 大流行开始以来,2125 名电子烟使用者中的 1198 名(56.4%)改变了他们的使用情况:388 人(32.4%)戒烟,422 人(35.3%)减少尼古丁用量,211 人(17.6%)增加尼古丁用量,94 人(7.8%)增加大麻使用量,82 人(6.9%)改用其他产品。参与者报告说,无法前往电子烟商店和产品无法获得是大流行开始后获取电子烟困难的原因。自 COVID-19 大流行开始以来,个人报告说从替代零售商店购买(一次性电子烟,632 人中有 150 人[23.7%];pod-based,797 人中有 144 人[18.1%];其他电子烟,560 人中有 125 人[22.3%],即 18.1%-23.7%)、从在线零售购买而不是实体店(一次性电子烟,632 人中有 115 人[18.2%];pod-based,797 人中有 156 人[19.6%];其他电子烟,560 人中有 111 人[19.8%],即 18.2%-19.8%),以及从零售转向在线(一次性电子烟,632 人中有 11 人[1.7%];pod-based,797 人中有 17 人[2.0%];其他电子烟,560 人中有 13 人[2.3%],即 1.7%-2.3%)。其他一些人报告说没有变化:从实体店(一次性电子烟,632 人中有 262 人[41.5%];pod-based,797 人中有 344 人[43.2%];其他电子烟,560 人中有 223 人[39.8%],即 39.8%-43.2%)和在线(一次性电子烟,632 人中有 94 人[14.9%];pod-based,797 人中有 136 人[17.1%];其他电子烟,560 人中有 88 人[15.8%],即 14.9%-17.1%)。未成年青年报告说从电子烟商店和/或经销商或收到此类送货的朋友那里收到电子烟送货,63 人(229 人中有 63 人[27.5%])自我报告说在没有年龄验证的情况下获取电子烟。如果电子烟使用者之前使用电子烟的次数在 11 到 99 次之间,他们戒烟或减少使用的可能性降低 52%(调整后的优势比,0.48;95%置信区间,0.30-0.78);如果之前使用电子烟的次数超过 100 次,他们戒烟的可能性降低 68%(调整后的优势比,0.32;95%置信区间,0.20-0.51);如果他们尼古丁依赖,他们戒烟的可能性降低 51%(调整后的优势比,0.49;95%置信区间,0.35-0.70)。
结论和相关性:在 COVID-19 大流行期间,青少年电子烟使用者报告了电子烟使用、购买地点和无需年龄验证即可购买电子烟的情况发生变化。美国食品和药物管理局和地方政策制定者可能会发现这些数据有助于制定政策,防止向未成年青年销售电子烟。