Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez

Social norms towards smoking and vaping and associations with product use among youth in England, Canada, and the US

Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez - 11 December 2019

Source:

East, K. A., Hitchman, S. C., McNeill, A., Thrasher, J. F., & Hammond, D. (2019). Social norms towards smoking and vaping and associations with product use among youth in England, Canada, and the US. Drug and alcohol dependence, 107635.

 

Highlights

-England had more pro-smoking but less pro-vaping norms overall.

-Canada and US differed on friend smoking only, which was greater in Canada than US.

-Country differences cannot easily be explained by prevalence or policies.

-Smokers had more pro-smoking norms, vapers had more pro-vaping norms.

-There were also some cross-product associations between norms and product use.

 

Abstract

 

Background

This study assesses differences in social norms towards smoking and vaping among youth across countries (England, Canada, US) and smoking and vaping status.

 

Methods

Data are from the 2017 ITC Youth Tobacco and Vaping Survey, among youth age 16–19 in England (N = 3444), Canada (N = 3327), and US (N = 3509). Prevalence of friend smoking, friend vaping, peer approval of smoking, and peer approval of vaping were estimated. Adjusted logistic regression models were estimated for each norm to assess associations with country, smoking status, and vaping status, adjusting for sociodemographics, alcohol use, and marijuana use.

 

Results

47% and 52% reported friend smoking and vaping respectively. Perceived peer approval of vaping (44%) was almost double that of smoking (23%). Compared with England, fewer Canadian and US youth reported friend smoking (Canada: AOR = 0.71 [95% CI = 0.62–0.82]; US: AOR = 0.54 [0.47–0.62]) and peer approval of smoking (Canada: AOR = 0.74 [0.63–0.87]; US: AOR = 0.78 [0.67–0.91]), yet more reported peer approval of vaping (Canada: AOR = 1.23 [1.08–1.41]; US: AOR = 1.30 [1.14–1.48]). More Canadian than English youth reported friend vaping (AOR = 1.17 [1.02–1.36]). Friend smoking, peer approval of smoking, and friend vaping were more common among smokers and vapers (all p < .02). Peer approval of vaping was more common among vapers but less common among smokers (all p < .044).

 

Conclusions

Youth had more positive vaping than smoking norms. English youth reported the most pro-smoking but least pro-vaping norms in adjusted models; this was unexpected given country differences in regulatory environments. Norms towards both products were associated with use, with some evidence of cross-product associations between norms and behaviours.