ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies

Introduction This study characterizes the retail environment for Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) near public universities in California, assesses marketing in the first random sample of ENDS retailers, and compares ENDS retailer density and retail marketing near campuses with and without...

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Main Authors: Dianne C. Barker, Nina C. Schleicher, Kimberly Ababseh, Trent O. Johnson, Lisa Henriksen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Publishing 2018-10-01
Series:Tobacco Induced Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/ENDS-retailers-and-marketing-near-university-campuses-with-and-without-tobacco-free,94600,0,2.html
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spelling doaj-f18f34819d5044a8b1b5722eaa661fbb2020-11-24T21:34:04ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Induced Diseases1617-96252018-10-0116October10.18332/tid/9460094600ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policiesDianne C. Barker0Nina C. Schleicher1Kimberly Ababseh2Trent O. Johnson3Lisa Henriksen4Public Health Institute, Oakland, United StatesStanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, United StatesStanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, United StatesStanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, United StatesStanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, United StatesIntroduction This study characterizes the retail environment for Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) near public universities in California, assesses marketing in the first random sample of ENDS retailers, and compares ENDS retailer density and retail marketing near campuses with and without tobacco-free policies. Methods Two data sources were used to construct a sampling frame of possible ENDS retailers, which were mapped within 1–4 miles of 33 campuses of the University of California and the California State University systems. To assess retailer density, a telephone survey of possible ENDS retailers (n=1186) determined who sold e-cigarettes or e-liquids (completion rate=72.9%). To assess retail marketing, trained data collectors completed observations in a random sample (n=438, mean M=13.3 stores per campus, SD=11.2) in the Fall of 2015. Results In a telephone survey, 59.1% of retailers reported selling e-cigarettes or e-liquids. Half of the campuses had 10 or more ENDS retailers nearby. Most ENDS retailers were convenience stores (42.5%), and more were head shops (8.4%) than smoke shops (6.8%) or vape shops (6.2%). Nearly half (43.6%) of ENDS retailers sold products marketed as zero-nicotine and 13.9% sold NRT. ENDS advertising was visible in 72.4% and on the exterior of 28.1% of retailers. However, the presence of exterior advertising for ENDS was significantly lower near campuses with established tobacco-free policies than near campuses with recent or no tobacco-free policies (OR=0.45, 95% CI: 0.22–0.94). Conclusions The large number of tobacco retailers that sell ENDS near colleges suggests a need for better monitoring and regulation of ENDS availability and marketing. The widespread availability of zero-nicotine products suggests a need to examine whether nicotine-free products are as advertised and safe to use. Longitudinal research is needed to understand how retail marketing for ENDS responds to change in tobacco-free policies at nearby campuses.http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/ENDS-retailers-and-marketing-near-university-campuses-with-and-without-tobacco-free,94600,0,2.htmlENDS retail marketingelectronic cigarettesyoung adultstobacco-free college campuses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dianne C. Barker
Nina C. Schleicher
Kimberly Ababseh
Trent O. Johnson
Lisa Henriksen
spellingShingle Dianne C. Barker
Nina C. Schleicher
Kimberly Ababseh
Trent O. Johnson
Lisa Henriksen
ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
Tobacco Induced Diseases
ENDS retail marketing
electronic cigarettes
young adults
tobacco-free college campuses
author_facet Dianne C. Barker
Nina C. Schleicher
Kimberly Ababseh
Trent O. Johnson
Lisa Henriksen
author_sort Dianne C. Barker
title ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
title_short ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
title_full ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
title_fullStr ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
title_full_unstemmed ENDS retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
title_sort ends retailers and marketing near university campuses with and without tobacco-free policies
publisher European Publishing
series Tobacco Induced Diseases
issn 1617-9625
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Introduction This study characterizes the retail environment for Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) near public universities in California, assesses marketing in the first random sample of ENDS retailers, and compares ENDS retailer density and retail marketing near campuses with and without tobacco-free policies. Methods Two data sources were used to construct a sampling frame of possible ENDS retailers, which were mapped within 1–4 miles of 33 campuses of the University of California and the California State University systems. To assess retailer density, a telephone survey of possible ENDS retailers (n=1186) determined who sold e-cigarettes or e-liquids (completion rate=72.9%). To assess retail marketing, trained data collectors completed observations in a random sample (n=438, mean M=13.3 stores per campus, SD=11.2) in the Fall of 2015. Results In a telephone survey, 59.1% of retailers reported selling e-cigarettes or e-liquids. Half of the campuses had 10 or more ENDS retailers nearby. Most ENDS retailers were convenience stores (42.5%), and more were head shops (8.4%) than smoke shops (6.8%) or vape shops (6.2%). Nearly half (43.6%) of ENDS retailers sold products marketed as zero-nicotine and 13.9% sold NRT. ENDS advertising was visible in 72.4% and on the exterior of 28.1% of retailers. However, the presence of exterior advertising for ENDS was significantly lower near campuses with established tobacco-free policies than near campuses with recent or no tobacco-free policies (OR=0.45, 95% CI: 0.22–0.94). Conclusions The large number of tobacco retailers that sell ENDS near colleges suggests a need for better monitoring and regulation of ENDS availability and marketing. The widespread availability of zero-nicotine products suggests a need to examine whether nicotine-free products are as advertised and safe to use. Longitudinal research is needed to understand how retail marketing for ENDS responds to change in tobacco-free policies at nearby campuses.
topic ENDS retail marketing
electronic cigarettes
young adults
tobacco-free college campuses
url http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/ENDS-retailers-and-marketing-near-university-campuses-with-and-without-tobacco-free,94600,0,2.html
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