Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults

Background: The wide availability of flavored e-cigarettes and broad use of e-cigarettes in public places may contribute to the rapidly increasing rates of use among youth and young adults in the U.S. However, policies at the federal, state and local levels can address these factors. Objective: Asse...

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Main Authors: Lauren Czaplicki, Randall Simpson, Yitong Zhou, Minal Patel, Alison F. Cuccia, Donna M. Vallone, Barbara A. Schillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-09-01
Series:Tobacco Use Insights
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1179173X20959700
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spelling doaj-2e267196eb0643adb4e97733e35d40312021-04-02T11:14:29ZengSAGE PublishingTobacco Use Insights1179-173X2020-09-011310.1177/1179173X20959700Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US AdultsLauren Czaplicki0Randall Simpson1Yitong Zhou2Minal Patel3Alison F. Cuccia4Donna M. Vallone5Barbara A. Schillo6Schroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USASchroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USASchroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USASchroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USASchroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USADepartment of Health, Behavior, and Society, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USASchroeder Institute at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC, USABackground: The wide availability of flavored e-cigarettes and broad use of e-cigarettes in public places may contribute to the rapidly increasing rates of use among youth and young adults in the U.S. However, policies at the federal, state and local levels can address these factors. Objective: Assess public support for 5 e-cigarette-related policies and evaluate response patterns by demographics, tobacco use, e-cigarette harm perceptions, geographic region, and strength of state-level clean indoor air policies. Methods: Data were collected Oct-Dec 2018 from a nationally representative online panel of U.S. adults (n = 3211). We measured support for 5 policies: (1) a ban on the sale flavored e-cigarettes; (2) requiring tobacco products, like e-cigarettes, be kept out of view in stores where adolescents shop; and prohibiting e-cigarette use in (3) all public places; (4) restaurants; and (5) bars. Weighted, adjusted logistic regressions modeled variation in policy support. Results: A majority of respondents (63.3%) supported a flavor ban, with no differences in support by smoking status. Most respondents supported keeping tobacco products out of view (78.0%) and prohibiting e-cigarette use in indoor public places (82.9%), restaurants (86.5%), and bars (76.1%). In the adjusted models, current e-cigarette users had significantly lower odds of policy support compared to never users. We observed no differences in support by geographic region or strength of state-level clean indoor air policies. Conclusion: Results suggest high levels of public support to regulate e-cigarette flavors, marketing, and use in public places. Targeted messaging may be needed to increase support among current e-cigarette users.https://doi.org/10.1177/1179173X20959700
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren Czaplicki
Randall Simpson
Yitong Zhou
Minal Patel
Alison F. Cuccia
Donna M. Vallone
Barbara A. Schillo
spellingShingle Lauren Czaplicki
Randall Simpson
Yitong Zhou
Minal Patel
Alison F. Cuccia
Donna M. Vallone
Barbara A. Schillo
Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
Tobacco Use Insights
author_facet Lauren Czaplicki
Randall Simpson
Yitong Zhou
Minal Patel
Alison F. Cuccia
Donna M. Vallone
Barbara A. Schillo
author_sort Lauren Czaplicki
title Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
title_short Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
title_full Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
title_fullStr Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
title_full_unstemmed Public Support for E-Cigarette-related Policies among a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults
title_sort public support for e-cigarette-related policies among a nationally representative sample of us adults
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Tobacco Use Insights
issn 1179-173X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Background: The wide availability of flavored e-cigarettes and broad use of e-cigarettes in public places may contribute to the rapidly increasing rates of use among youth and young adults in the U.S. However, policies at the federal, state and local levels can address these factors. Objective: Assess public support for 5 e-cigarette-related policies and evaluate response patterns by demographics, tobacco use, e-cigarette harm perceptions, geographic region, and strength of state-level clean indoor air policies. Methods: Data were collected Oct-Dec 2018 from a nationally representative online panel of U.S. adults (n = 3211). We measured support for 5 policies: (1) a ban on the sale flavored e-cigarettes; (2) requiring tobacco products, like e-cigarettes, be kept out of view in stores where adolescents shop; and prohibiting e-cigarette use in (3) all public places; (4) restaurants; and (5) bars. Weighted, adjusted logistic regressions modeled variation in policy support. Results: A majority of respondents (63.3%) supported a flavor ban, with no differences in support by smoking status. Most respondents supported keeping tobacco products out of view (78.0%) and prohibiting e-cigarette use in indoor public places (82.9%), restaurants (86.5%), and bars (76.1%). In the adjusted models, current e-cigarette users had significantly lower odds of policy support compared to never users. We observed no differences in support by geographic region or strength of state-level clean indoor air policies. Conclusion: Results suggest high levels of public support to regulate e-cigarette flavors, marketing, and use in public places. Targeted messaging may be needed to increase support among current e-cigarette users.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1179173X20959700
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