An International Systematic Review of Prevalence, Risk, and Protective Factors Associated with Young People’s E-Cigarette Use
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Identification
2.2. Selection Procedure
2.3. Coding and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. General Characteristics
3.2. Prevalence
3.3. Sample Characteristics
3.4. Gender Differences
3.5. Protective Factors
3.6. Risk Factors
Author (Country) | Prevalence | Sample Size (Age) | Gender Difference | Protective Factors (β/OR) | Risk Factors (β/OR) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anand et al. (2015) [40] (US) | Lifetime, 18.2%; Current, 10% | 3298 (9–12th grades) | Significant difference | Being female (0.59), plan to graduate high school (0.17), mother living in the household (0.55), mother never smoked tobacco (0.50), father never smoked tobacco (0.57), not knowing anyone who uses e-cigarettes (0.25) | Father’s use of snuff (3.82), mother’s use of e-cigarettes (2.60), cigarette use (8.79), smokeless tobacco use (3.75) |
Barrington-Trimis et al. (2015) [41] (US) | Lifetime, 24%; Current, 9.6% | 2084 (11–12th grades) | Different but not statistically significant | N/A | Anyone living at home using e-cigarettes (6.80) and cigarettes (2.79), number of friends who use e-cigarettes (18.7) and cigarettes (7.46), best friends’ positive reactions to e-cigarette use (18.6), perception of the harm of e-cigarettes and cigarettes (6.02) |
Best et al. (2015) [42] (Scotland) | Lifetime, 17.3% | 1404 (Pupils in secondary 2 and 4) | N/A | Having never smoked (0.10) | Recognizing more cigarette brands (1.20), having a best friend who smoked (3.17) |
Bostean et al. (2016) [43] (US) | Lifetime, 13.4%; Current, 7.6% | 67,701 (7, 9, 11th grades) | Significant difference | Being female (0.84) | Parents’ education levels (1.44), having ever used tobacco (6.84), having ever used alcohol (5.83), having ever used marijuana (8.15), race (Hispanic; 1.54), presence of a retailer near schools (1.70), attending schools with a high percentage of students eligible for free and reduced lunch program (2.94) |
Bowe et al. (2021) [27] (Ireland) | Current, 5.1%; Dual, 9.3% | 4490 (15–16 years old) | Significant difference | Parental supervision (0.71), valuing conventional social norms (0.68) | Parent smokes (1.71), feeling the need to smoke to fit in with peers (2.13), few friends who smoke (2.15), most/almost all friends who smoke (5.19), self-reported academic achievement average (1.43) and below average (2.53), parental reaction to cigarette use (do not care) (4.65) |
Buu et al. (2020) [44] (US) | Current, 4.86% | 9258 (12–17 years old) | Significant difference | Being non-Hispanic and Black (0.38) | Higher levels of internalizing (1.29) and externalizing problems (1.42), receiving more money per week (1.12), being older (1.72) |
Carey et al. (2019) [45] (US) | N/A | 3907 (6, 8, 10th grades) | N/A | Positive affect (0.61), belief that e-cigarettes are harmful to health (0.69) | E-cigarette use among family members (4.72), alcohol and marijuana use (3.92), poor school performance (12.98), sensation seeking (1.45), social norm (okay to use, common to use) (6.69) |
Case (2016) [46] (US) | Lifetime, 17.3%; Current, 6.55% | 3769 (6, 8, 10th grades) | No difference | N/A | Sensation seeking (1.32) |
Case et al. (2020) [47] (US) | N/A | 2272 (14–18 years old) | N/A | N/A | Higher recall ENDS marketing (1.64), peer tobacco use (3.06), alcohol use (2.67), having ever used marijuana with JUUL (10.08) and with other ENDS (12.07) |
Cho et al. (2011) [9] (Korea) | Lifetime, 0.5% | 4341 (Middle and high school students) | Significant difference | N/A | Propensity to be easily affected by friends (3.9), having ever smoked a cigarette (11.2) |
Chun et al. (2020) [48] (Korea) | Lifetime, 6.9%; Current, 2%; Dual, 1.6% | 62,276 (13–18 years old) | Significant difference | Being a vocational school student (0.66) | Tobacco accessibility (1.3), secondhand smoke exposure at home (1.09), sexual intercourse (1.25), being a middle school student (2.13) |
Conner et al. (2019) [30] (UK) | Current, 13.3%; Dual, 11% | 3210 (13–14 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Higher impulsivity (1.26), friends and family smoking (1.48), being male (1.64) |
Demissie et al. (2017) [49] (US) | Current, 15.8%; Dual, 7.5% | 15,624 (9–12th grades) | Significant difference | Engaging in daily physical activity (0.91) | Engaging in a physical fight (1.72), lifetime suicide attempt (1.86), texting or emailing while driving (1.39), drinking alcohol (2.62), using marijuana (3.70), using other illicit drugs (2.73), using nonmedical drugs (2.30), having multiple sexual partners (2.35), being sexually active (1.86), drinking more soda (1.35) |
Dobbs et al. (2017) [50] (US) | Lifetime, 19.4%; Current, 9.2% | 27,294 (9–19 years old) | N/A | N/A | Perceived e-cigarette as less harm (2.40), perceived less addictiveness of e-cigarettes (2.11), smoking history (7.84), living with a smoker (1.44), being older (1.85), being Hispanic (1.33) |
Dubar et al. (2019) [51] (US) | Lifetime, 43.11%; Current, 8.62% | 2039 (16–20 years old) | N/A | N/A | Cigarette use (0.17), marijuana use (0.03) |
Enlow (2018) [52] (US) | Lifetime, 37.7%; Current, 18% | 494 (13–18 years old) | N/A | Perceived costs of vaping (0.52), greater self-efficacy (0.22) | Cigarette use (2.86), alcohol use (2.67), marijuana use (2.23), more modeling of smoking in their social network (1.34), higher extraversion (2.20) |
Etim et al. (2020) [53] (US) | N/A | 1060 (15–20 years old) | N/A | N/A | Peer e-cigarette use (2.01), exposure to e-cigarette commercials (1.27), household smoking (4.70) |
Geidne et al. (2017) [5] (Sweden) | Lifetime, 26% | 665 (15–16 years old) | No difference | N/A | Smoking conventional cigarettes (5.6), snus use (2.2), alcohol use (4.4), water pipe use (3.2) |
Hanewinkel & Isensee (2015) [4] (Germany) | Lifetime, 4.7% | 2693 (5–10th grades) | No difference | N/A | Higher sensation seeking (2.24), having friends (2.06) and parents (1.89) who smoke cigarettes |
Hedman et al. (2020) [54] (Sweden) | Lifetime, 21.4%; Current, 4.2%; Dual, 1.7% | 2185 (14–15 years old, 19 years old) | Significant difference | Eating a healthy diet (0.74) | Daily smoking (6.27), participation in an arts vocational program (2.22) |
Jayakumar et al. (2020) [55] (Canada) | Current, 41% | 137 (16–25 years old) | No difference | Perceiving moderate or great risk of regularly vaping without nicotine (0.34) | Current alcohol use (2.66), current cannabis use (13.78), having friends who used cannabis (3.80), using e-cigarettes (2.34), having friends who smoke (2.23), seeing anyone use an e-cigarette in the past seven days (5.97), currently not using cannabis (3.80) |
Jeon et al. (2016) [56] (Korea) | Lifetime, 12.6%; Current, 1.4%; Dual, 4.9% | 2744 (13–18 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Close friends smoking (8.58), sibling smoking (3.25), teacher smoking (1.38) |
Jenson et al. (2018) [23] (US) | Current, 6.4%; Dual, 3.2% | 126,868 (8, 9, 11th grades) | No difference | N/A | Ethnicity (American Indian students) (3.57), sexual identity (bisexual students) (4.40), economic status (students receiving free/reduced lunch) (1.92), alcohol use (9.79), decreasing academic performance (2.47) |
Kaleta et al. (2016) [57] (Poland) | Lifetime, 21.7%; Current, 27.4% | 3552 (13–19 years old) | Significant difference | Higher mother’s education level (0.50), higher father’s education level (0.60), perceiving e-cigarettes as more harmful (0.30) | Father’s education level - medium (1.5), alcohol use (4.3–5.3), ever having smoked tobacco (6.7–7.5), being a current tobacco smoker (9.8–32.5), parental smoking (1.4), some friends smoking (1.4–1.5) and most friends smoking (2.3), a perception that tobacco smoking is harmful to health (1.9–3.2), perceiving e-cigarettes as less harmful (1.8–2.1) |
Kinnunen et al. (2014) [58] (Finland) | Lifetime, 12.6% | 3535 (12–18 years old) | Different but not statistically significant | N/A | Cigarette experimenter (8.09) and daily smoker (41.35), ever having used snus (2.96), ever having used waterpipe (2.21), vocational upper secondary school students (2.06), school performance slightly or much poorer (1.92) |
Kinnunen et al. (2020) [59] (Belgium, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal) | Lifetime, 34%; Current, 2.7% | 12,167 (14–17 years old) | Significant difference | Being older (0.77) | Parental smoking (1.28), low academic achievement (1.79), some peers smoking (2.33), most or all peers smoking (4.62) |
Kintz et al. (2020) [60] (US) | Lifetime, 28.1% | 2097 (11–12th grades) | No difference | N/A | Cigarette (3.46), hookah (5.85), and cigar (4.25) use |
Kwon et al. (2018) [1] (US) | N/A | 9853 (12–17 years old) | No difference | Perceptions of e-cigarettes as addictive (0.62) and harmful (0.40) | Internalizing problems (2.53), externalizing problems (3.47), being a rule breaker (8.43), liking frightening things (3.44), preferring unpredictable friends (4.72), having ever used alcohol (3.03) or marijuana (3.42) or other substances (1.98), household secondhand smoke exposure (1.48) |
Lessard et al. (2014) [61] (US) | Lifetime, 36.9% | 136 (Middle to late adolescence) | No difference | Parental monitoring (0.85) | Current cigarette use (3.88), current marijuana use (4.07), current alcohol use (7.72), peer substance use (1.34) |
Maciej et al. (2012) [11] (Poland) | Lifetime, 20.9%; Current,6.9% | 13.787 (15–24 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Being male (9.0), being older (5.9), living in urban areas (8.5), ever smoked a cigarette (9.7), current cigarette smoking (15.3), parents smoking (10.0), partner smoking (15.6) |
Mantey et al. (2016) [62] (US) | Lifetime, 19.8%; Current, 9.3% | 22,007 (Middle and high school students) | Significant difference | Being female (0.81) | Exposure to pro e-cigarette marketing sources (1.22), being older (2.37), other tobacco use (15.66) |
Mantey et al. (2019) [63] (US) | Current, 8.24% | 1217 (9–12th grade) | Significant difference | N/A | Retail access to e-cigarettes (2.11–5.81) |
McCabe et al. (2020) [28] (US) | Current, 11.9% | 38,926 (8, 10, 12th grades) | Significant difference | N/A | Being male (1.59), average grades (1.44), binge drinking (2.46), cigarette use (4.83), marijuana use (3.08), nonmedical drug use (1.63), attending schools with a higher prevalence of smoking (1.35) |
Morello et al. (2016) [64] (Argentina) | Lifetime, 7.6% | 3172 (Secondary school students) | No difference | Attending a public school (0.40) | Higher sensation seeking (1.49), being a current smoker (2.58), having friends who smoke cigarettes (1.93), exposure to ads for tobacco products online (1.87) |
Ofuchi et al. (2020) [65] (Thailand) | Current, 6.7%;Lifetime, 7% | 6167 (13–18 years old) | Different but not statistically | N/A | Emotional abuse (1.4), physical abuse (1.4), sexual abuse (1.5), parental separation or divorce (1.36), child violence (1.8), ever having had an incarcerated household member (1.98), history of adverse childhood experience (1.5) |
Park et al. (2017) [8] (Korea) | Dual, 3.5% | 6307 (7–12th grades) | Significant difference | N/A | Being male (2.11), earning higher grades (3.10), higher weekly allowance (1.56), residence in urban areas (1.20), friend’s smoking (2.50), daily smoking (2.11), number of cigarettes (1.52), quitting attempts (1.52), risky drinking (1.14), lifetime drug use (1.45), lifetime sexual intercourse (1.12) |
Parks et al. (2020) [66] (US) | Current, 9.99%; Dual, 5.63% | 111,091 (5, 8, 9, 11th grades) | N/A | Internal assets (0.63), strong anti-smoking norms (0.88), positive teacher engagement (0.76) | Parental incarceration (0.43) |
Robert Loudres et al. (2019) [29] (Malaysia) | Current, 9% | 13,162 (10–19 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Being male (4.08), age (2.64), ethnicity (2.25), cigarette smoking (13.16) |
Rohde et al. (2018) [19] (US) | Lifetime, 47% | 69 (14–18 years old) | Different but not statistically | Mother’s education level (0.24), addiction risk beliefs about e-cigarettes (0.46) | Combustible cigarette use (4.90) |
Santistevan (2016) [67] (US) | Lifetime, 21%; Current, 4.8% | 251 (13–19 years old) | N/A | N/A | Awareness of e-cigarettes through social media (15.68), shared information with peers (52.10) |
Sawdey et al. (2019) [68] (US) | Current, 3.9%; Dual, 7.7% | 12,460 (12–17 years old) | N/A | N/A | Low academic achievement (1.3), other tobacco use (3.7), marijuana and alcohol use (2.6), high internalizing problems (1.5), high externalizing problems (2.0), high sensation seeking (1.9), household tobacco use (1.4) |
Shih et al. (2017) [69] (US) | Past year, 21.3% | 2359 (High school students and college freshmen) | N/A | Neighborhood cohesion (0.83) | Neighborhood problems with alcohol and drugs (1.25), neighborhood disorganization (1.59) |
Soteriades et al. (2020) [70] (Greece) | Lifetime, 12.3%; Current, 2.8% | 4096 (13–15 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Use of any combustible tobacco products (7.85), e-cigarette use by other family members (5.72), being older (2.87) |
Tran (2016) [71] (US) | Lifetime, 5.6% | 180 (6–9th grades) | N/A | N/A | Previous cigarette smoking experience (0.054), perception of benefits of cigarette smoking (1.14) |
Trucco et al. (2021) [72] (US) | N/A | 176 (14–17 years old) | N/A | N/A | Perceptions of e-cigarettes as being cool (0.28) |
Unger et al. (2018) [73] (US) | Lifetime, 11.9%; Current, 2.9% | 13,651 (12–17 years old) | N/A | N/A | Exposure to tobacco websites (3.0-3.2) |
Veliz et al. (2017) [74] (US) | Current, 10.8%; Dual, 7.2% | 4450 (12th grade) | N/A | Participation in at least one competitive sport (6.2), or three or more sports (6.4), participation in soccer (0.37) | Participation in wrestling (2.14), participation in baseball/softball (1.36) |
Vogel et al. (2018) [75] (US) | N/A | 173 (13–18 years old) | N/A | N/A | Percentage of friends who use e-cigarettes (0.22), past month cigarette use (0.19) |
White et al. (2015) [76] (New Zealand) | Lifetime, 20% | 3127 (14–15 years old) | Significant difference | N/A | Higher weekly income/allowances (2.03), current smoking (4.56), having close friends who smoke cigarettes (2.11), having used other tobacco products (2.71), having ever used marijuana (2.24), having ever engaged in binge drinking (1.87) |
Wilhelm et al. (2021) [77] (US) | Current, 5.7%; Dual, 4.2% | 2009 (8, 9, 11th grades) | Significant difference | Strong parental anti-smoking norms (0.19), college aspirations (0.41), internal developmental assets (0.54), parental connectedness (0.64) | Regular religious participation (2.69) |
Williams et al. (2020) [78] (Canada) | Current, 22% | 60,601 (14–18 years old) | Significant difference | Intramural participation among female students (0.87) | Varsity participation (1.37) for females and males (1.57), participation in both intramural and varsity sports for females (1.34) and males (1.46) |
Wills et al. * (2015) [79] (US) | Lifetime, 29%; Current 18.0% | 1941 (9–10th grades) | No difference | Parental support (23.3), parental monitoring (20.0), academic involvement (16.6), behavioral self-control (61.2), emotional self-control (40.4) | Parent–adolescent conflict (8.7), sensation seeking (15.8), rebelliousness (8.4), smoker prototypes (9.4), smoking expectancies (10.1), behavioral dysregulation (43.6), emotional dysregulation (24.7), peer smoking (1.5), perceiving e-cigarette as healthy (1.8), alcohol use (1.5), marijuana use (0.6), heavy drinking (0.3) |
Zavala-Arciniega et al. (2019) [80] (Mexico) | Lifetime, 9.5%; Current, 10.9% | 8718 (Middle school- aged students) | N/A | N/A | Being male (2.46), higher family affluence (1.13), being a regular smoker (1.81), drug use in the last year (1.89), higher technophilia (1.84), higher sensation seeking (1.31), family members using both e-cigarettes and cigarettes (1.51), being an occasional smoker (0.59) |
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Kim, J.; Lee, S.; Chun, J. An International Systematic Review of Prevalence, Risk, and Protective Factors Associated with Young People’s E-Cigarette Use. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811570
Kim J, Lee S, Chun J. An International Systematic Review of Prevalence, Risk, and Protective Factors Associated with Young People’s E-Cigarette Use. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(18):11570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811570
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Jinyung, Serim Lee, and JongSerl Chun. 2022. "An International Systematic Review of Prevalence, Risk, and Protective Factors Associated with Young People’s E-Cigarette Use" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 18: 11570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811570
APA StyleKim, J., Lee, S., & Chun, J. (2022). An International Systematic Review of Prevalence, Risk, and Protective Factors Associated with Young People’s E-Cigarette Use. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(18), 11570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811570