O'Brien Erin Keely, Nguyen Anh B, Persoskie Alexander, Hoffman Allison C
Center for Tobacco Products, Food and Drug Administration, United States.
Center for Tobacco Products, Food and Drug Administration, United States.
Prev Med. 2017 Mar;96:94-100. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2016.12.048. Epub 2016 Dec 27.
This research described U.S. adults' beliefs about nicotine and low nicotine cigarettes (LNCs) using the nationally-representative Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS-FDA 2015; N=3738). About three quarters of people either were unsure of the relationship between nicotine and cancer or incorrectly believed that nicotine causes cancer. People who were non-White, less educated, age 65+, and never established smokers were most likely to be unaware that nicotine is not a cause of cancer. More than a quarter of people held the potentially inaccurate beliefs that LNCs would be less harmful and addictive than typical cigarettes. Whites were more likely than Blacks to believe LNCs were less harmful than typical cigarettes, and never smokers were more likely to believe this than established quitters. Whites and people with at least a college degree were more likely to believe that LNCs would be less addictive than typical cigarettes. Overall, we found that many people, particularly the demographic subgroups identified here, held incorrect beliefs about nicotine and potentially inaccurate beliefs about LNCs. Findings should be considered in assessing the public health impact of marketing low nicotine products. Incorrectly believing that nicotine causes cancer could discourage smokers from switching to safer nicotine-containing alternatives, and could lead nonsmokers to experiment with low nicotine tobacco products, believing that cancer risk would be reduced. Findings underscore the need to educate the public on the health effects of nicotine and LNCs, and can help public health practitioners determine which subgroups should be prioritized in targeted educational efforts.
本研究利用具有全国代表性的健康信息国家趋势调查(HINTS - FDA 2015;N = 3738)描述了美国成年人对尼古丁和低尼古丁香烟(LNC)的看法。约四分之三的人要么不确定尼古丁与癌症之间的关系,要么错误地认为尼古丁会导致癌症。非白人、受教育程度较低、65岁及以上以及从未有过吸烟经历的人最有可能不知道尼古丁不会导致癌症。超过四分之一的人持有可能不准确的看法,即低尼古丁香烟比普通香烟危害更小、成瘾性更低。白人比黑人更有可能认为低尼古丁香烟比普通香烟危害更小,从未吸烟者比已戒烟者更有可能这样认为。白人和至少拥有大学学位的人更有可能认为低尼古丁香烟的成瘾性比普通香烟低。总体而言,我们发现许多人,尤其是这里确定的人口亚组,对尼古丁持有错误看法,对低尼古丁香烟持有可能不准确的看法。在评估低尼古丁产品营销对公共卫生的影响时应考虑这些发现。错误地认为尼古丁会导致癌症可能会阻碍吸烟者转向更安全的含尼古丁替代品,并可能导致非吸烟者尝试低尼古丁烟草产品,因为他们认为这样会降低患癌风险。这些发现强调了有必要对公众进行关于尼古丁和低尼古丁香烟健康影响的教育,并有助于公共卫生从业者确定在有针对性的教育工作中应优先关注哪些亚组。