Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, UK.
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, UK; Department of Clinical, Educational, and Health Psychology, University College London, UK.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Apr 1;221:108590. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108590. Epub 2021 Feb 13.
To explore i) associations between vaping and self-reported diagnosed/suspected Covid-19; ii) changes in vaping since Covid-19 and factors associated with these changes; iii) whether Covid-19 motivated current or recent ex-vapers to quit.
Cross-sectional online survey of 2791 UK adults recruited 30/04/2020-14/06/2020. Participants self-reported data on sociodemographic characteristics, diagnosed/suspected Covid-19, vaping status, changes in vaping and motivation to quit vaping since Covid-19.
There were no differences in diagnosed/suspected Covid-19 between never, current and ex-vapers. Bayes factors indicated there was sufficient evidence to rule out small negative (protective) associations between vaping status and diagnosed/suspected Covid-19. Among current vapers (n = 397), 9.7 % (95 % CI 6.8-12.6 %) self-reported vaping less than usual since Covid-19, 42.0 % (37.2-46.9 %) self-reported vaping more, and 48.3 % (43.4-53.2 %) self-reported no change. In adjusted analyses, vaping less was associated with being female (aOR = 3.40, 95 % CI 1.73-6.71), not living with children (aOR = 4.93, 1.15-21.08) and concurrent smoking (aOR = 8.77, 3.04-25.64), while vaping more was associated with being younger (aOR = 5.26, 1.37-20.0), living alone (aOR = 2.08, 1.14-3.85), and diagnosed/suspected Covid-19 (aOR = 4.72, 2.60-8.62). Of current vapers, 32.2 % (95 % CI 27.5-36.8 %) were motivated to quit vaping since Covid-19, partly motivated by Covid-19, and 21.0 %, (10.5-31.4 %) of recent ex-vapers quit vaping due to Covid-19.
Among UK adults, self-reported diagnosed/suspected Covid-19 was not associated with vaping status. Half of current vapers changed their vaping consumption since Covid-19, with the majority reporting an increase, and a minority was motivated to quit due to Covid-19.
The analysis plan was pre-registered, and it is available at https://osf.io/6j8z3/.
探讨 i)吸食电子烟与自我报告的确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染之间的关联;ii)新冠病毒大流行后吸食电子烟的变化情况,以及这些变化的相关因素;iii)新冠病毒是否促使当前或近期的电子烟使用者戒烟。
2020 年 4 月 30 日至 6 月 14 日期间,对英国 2791 名成年人进行了横断面在线调查。参与者自我报告了社会人口统计学特征、确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染、电子烟使用情况、新冠病毒大流行后电子烟使用变化情况以及戒烟动机等数据。
从未吸过电子烟、当前吸电子烟者和已戒电子烟者的自我报告的确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染之间无差异。贝叶斯因子表明,有足够的证据排除电子烟使用情况与确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染之间存在小的负(保护)关联。在当前吸电子烟者(n=397)中,9.7%(95%CI 6.8-12.6%)自我报告自新冠病毒大流行以来电子烟使用量减少,42.0%(37.2-46.9%)自我报告电子烟使用量增加,48.3%(43.4-53.2%)自我报告无变化。在调整后的分析中,电子烟使用量减少与女性(aOR=3.40,95%CI 1.73-6.71)、不与儿童同住(aOR=4.93,1.15-21.08)和同时吸烟(aOR=8.77,3.04-25.64)有关,而电子烟使用量增加与年龄较小(aOR=5.26,1.37-20.0)、独居(aOR=2.08,1.14-3.85)和确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染(aOR=4.72,2.60-8.62)有关。在当前吸电子烟者中,32.2%(95%CI 27.5-36.8%)自新冠病毒大流行以来有戒烟动机,部分动机是新冠病毒,21.0%(10.5-31.4%)的近期已戒电子烟者因新冠病毒而戒烟。
在英国成年人中,自我报告的确诊/疑似新冠病毒感染与电子烟使用情况无关。一半的当前吸电子烟者自新冠病毒大流行以来改变了电子烟的使用量,大多数人报告电子烟使用量增加,少数人因新冠病毒而戒烟。
分析计划已预先注册,可在 https://osf.io/6j8z3/ 上获取。