Research Fellow, UKCTAS, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Visiting Fellow, UKCTAS, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2019 Jan 1;21(1):81-87. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx245.
To explore the understandings of and engagement with e-cigarettes, of young adults from disadvantaged backgrounds, and how these may have an impact on existing smoking identities.
Twenty-two small group and 11 individual qualitative interviews were conducted in Central Scotland with 72 16-24 year olds between September 2015 and April 2016. Participants were mostly smokers and ex-smokers from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds.
Although most participants had tried e-cigarettes, they generally held ambivalent views about e-cigarettes and vaping. Two overarching themes were identified which helped in understanding this. Firstly, e-cigarettes were understood by the participants in relation to their existing smoking identities. Vaping was viewed as less controllable and more addictive than smoking, which did not fit with their self-identity as controlled smokers. Secondly, they felt that vaping could not replace the social and cultural importance that smoking had in their lives.
This study suggests that though young adults from disadvantaged areas are trying e-cigarettes for various reasons, vaping is rarely sustained. Through their own experiences of vaping and their observations of others vaping, the participants perceive the behavior as endangering an existing acceptable and controlled smoking identity. Additionally, e-cigarettes were considered to be a jarring presence in existing social situations where smoking was valued. This study, therefore, provides insights into how young adults may be rationalizing their continued smoking in the face of potentially less harmful alternatives.
As new and novel nicotine delivery devices, and due to their similarity to smoking, e-cigarettes have the potential to help smokers in their quit attempts. However, the findings from this study raise questions about whether e-cigarettes are regarded as having this potential by young adult smokers from disadvantaged socioeconomic environments where smoking is more commonplace and acceptable.
探讨来自弱势背景的年轻成年人对电子烟的理解和参与程度,以及这些因素如何影响他们现有的吸烟身份。
2015 年 9 月至 2016 年 4 月,在苏格兰中部对 72 名 16-24 岁的年轻人进行了 22 个小组和 11 个个人定性访谈。参与者大多来自社会经济地位较低的背景,是吸烟者或曾经的吸烟者。
尽管大多数参与者都尝试过电子烟,但他们对电子烟和蒸气的看法普遍存在矛盾。确定了两个总体主题,有助于理解这一点。首先,参与者从他们现有的吸烟身份来理解电子烟。蒸气被认为比吸烟更难以控制和更具成瘾性,这与他们作为自控吸烟者的自我认同不符。其次,他们认为蒸气无法取代吸烟在他们生活中的社会和文化重要性。
这项研究表明,尽管来自弱势地区的年轻成年人出于各种原因尝试电子烟,但蒸气的使用很少能持续下去。通过自己蒸气的经验以及观察他人蒸气的行为,参与者认为这种行为会危及现有的可接受和可控的吸烟身份。此外,电子烟被认为在重视吸烟的现有社交场合中是一种不协调的存在。因此,这项研究提供了一些见解,说明为什么年轻成年人在面对潜在危害较小的替代品时,可能会为自己继续吸烟进行合理化。
作为新的和新颖的尼古丁输送装置,由于它们与吸烟相似,电子烟有可能帮助吸烟者戒烟。然而,这项研究的结果提出了一个问题,即在吸烟更为普遍和可接受的社会经济弱势环境中,年轻的成年吸烟者是否认为电子烟具有这种潜力。