Department of Health Law, Policy and Management, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Partnered Evidence-based Policy Resource Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts.
Addiction. 2021 Nov;116(11):3180-3187. doi: 10.1111/add.15525. Epub 2021 May 8.
The vaping rate among US teenagers has doubled in the last 2 years, which may be explained in part by teenagers' optimism that they would have relatively little trouble in quitting. The aim of this study was to estimate the extent to which teenagers exhibited optimism bias, what characteristics are associated with optimism bias and which factors are related to respondents' perceptions of how hard it would be for them to quit.
A national, on-line, cross-sectional survey in 2018 using quota sampling.
United States.
Respondents were 1610 teenagers aged 14-18 years who had ever tried or heard of JUULs or e-cigarettes generally.
Optimism bias was defined as respondents' perceptions of their own difficulty quitting vaping compared with that of an average US person of their own age. Linear regression was used to examine associations between respondents' characteristics with both optimism bias and their own perceived difficulty quitting vaping.
More than 60% of teenagers were optimistically biased about their ability to quit vaping. Smoking (b = -0.69, P < 0.01) and JUULing (b = -0.62, P < 0.01) were negatively associated with optimism bias but reduced-price school lunch eligibility (0.27, P = 0.02) and school satisfaction were positively associated (b = 0.05, P = 0.02). Smoking (b = 0.85, P < 0.01) was associated with an increased perception of the difficulty of quitting. That association was negative for black respondents (b = -0.81, P = 0.01) and those eligible for reduced-priced lunches (b = -0.48, P = 0.01), and positive for Hispanic respondents (b = 0.47, P = 0.04).
On average, US teenagers appear to show optimism bias about their ability to quit vaping, which decreases with smoking and vaping and increases with eligibility for reduced-price school lunches.
在美国,青少年吸电子烟的比例在过去 2 年内翻了一番,这在一定程度上可能是因为青少年乐观地认为自己戒烟的难度相对较小。本研究旨在评估青少年表现出乐观偏见的程度、哪些特征与乐观偏见相关,以及哪些因素与受访者对自己戒烟难度的看法有关。
2018 年采用配额抽样的全国性在线横断面调查。
美国。
受访者为 1610 名年龄在 14-18 岁之间、曾尝试或听说过 JUUL 或一般电子烟的青少年。
乐观偏见的定义是受访者对自己戒烟难度的看法与同龄美国人相比。线性回归用于研究受访者特征与乐观偏见及其自身戒烟难度感知之间的关联。
超过 60%的青少年对自己戒烟的能力持乐观偏见。吸烟(b=-0.69,P<0.01)和 JUUL (b=-0.62,P<0.01)与乐观偏见呈负相关,但享受低价校餐资格(0.27,P=0.02)和对学校的满意度呈正相关(b=0.05,P=0.02)。吸烟(b=0.85,P<0.01)与戒烟难度感知增加有关。这种关联在黑人群体中为负(b=-0.81,P=0.01),在享受低价校餐资格的群体中为负(b=-0.48,P=0.01),在西班牙裔群体中为正(b=0.47,P=0.04)。
总体而言,美国青少年似乎对自己戒烟的能力表现出乐观偏见,这种偏见随着吸烟和吸电子烟的减少以及享受低价校餐资格的增加而减少。