Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
Tobacco Control Research, Surveillance and Health Equity Science, American Cancer Society, Inc, Kennesaw, Georgia.
JAMA Pediatr. 2022 Sep 1;176(9):878-885. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2022.2223.
Exposure to tobacco-related content on social media may foster positive attitudes toward tobacco products and brands, and influence the likelihood of initiating or continuing use of tobacco, especially among adolescents and young adults.
To perform the first systematic review and meta-analysis, to our knowledge, on studies that examined the association between exposure to tobacco content on social media and lifetime tobacco use, past 30-day tobacco use, and susceptibility to use tobacco among never users.
Tobacco, social media, and marketing search terms were entered into online databases, including MEDLINE, ISI Web of Science, Scopus, and PsychINFO. Study characteristics, including research design and methods, sampling strategy, and demographics, were assessed for each study.
Studies reporting odds ratios (ORs) for self-reported exposure to, or experimentally manipulated, tobacco content on social media and lifetime tobacco use, past 30-day tobacco, and susceptibility to use tobacco among never users. The systematic search produced 897 independent articles, of which 29 studies met inclusion criteria.
A 3-level random-effects meta-analysis was used to estimate ORs, 95% CIs, and heterogeneity (I2) for each tobacco use outcome. Study quality and publication bias were assessed.
Lifetime tobacco use, past 30-day tobacco use, and susceptibility to use tobacco among never users. Tobacco use included e-cigarettes, cigarettes, and other (cigar, hookah, smokeless tobacco).
The total sample size across the 24 included datasets was 139 624, including 100 666 adolescents (72%), 20 710 young adults (15%), and 18 248 adults (13%). Participants who were exposed to tobacco content on social media, compared with those who were not exposed, had greater odds of reporting lifetime tobacco use (OR, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.54-3.08; I2 = 94%), past 30-day tobacco use (OR, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.79-2.67; I2 = 84%), and susceptibility to use tobacco among never users (OR, 2.08; 95% CI, 1.65-2.63; I2 = 73%). Subgroup analyses showed similar associations for tobacco promotions, active engagement, passive engagement, lifetime exposure to tobacco content, exposure to tobacco content on more than 2 platforms, and exposure to tobacco content among adolescents and young adults.
Findings suggest that a comprehensive strategy to reduce the amount of tobacco content on social media should be developed by federal regulators. Such actions may have downstream effects on adolescent and young adult exposure to protobacco content, and ultimately tobacco use behaviors.
接触社交媒体上与烟草相关的内容可能会培养青少年和年轻人对烟草产品和品牌的积极态度,并影响他们开始或继续使用烟草的可能性,尤其是在青少年和年轻人中。
进行首次系统审查和荟萃分析,据我们所知,该分析研究了接触社交媒体上的烟草内容与终生吸烟、过去 30 天吸烟以及从未使用者使用烟草的易感性之间的关联。
烟草、社交媒体和营销搜索词被输入到在线数据库中,包括 MEDLINE、ISI Web of Science、Scopus 和 PsychINFO。对每项研究的研究特征,包括研究设计和方法、抽样策略和人口统计学,进行了评估。
报告自我报告的接触或实验操纵社交媒体上的烟草内容与终生吸烟、过去 30 天吸烟以及从未使用者使用烟草的易感性之间的比值比 (OR) 的研究。系统搜索产生了 897 篇独立文章,其中 29 项研究符合纳入标准。
使用 3 级随机效应荟萃分析来估计每个烟草使用结果的 OR、95%CI 和异质性 (I2)。评估了研究质量和发表偏倚。
终生吸烟、过去 30 天吸烟以及从未使用者使用烟草的易感性。烟草使用包括电子烟、香烟和其他(雪茄、水烟、无烟烟草)。
24 个纳入数据集的总样本量为 139624 人,包括 100666 名青少年(72%)、20710 名年轻人(15%)和 18248 名成年人(13%)。与未接触烟草内容的人相比,接触社交媒体上的烟草内容的参与者更有可能报告终生吸烟(OR,2.18;95%CI,1.54-3.08;I2=94%)、过去 30 天吸烟(OR,2.19;95%CI,1.79-2.67;I2=84%)和从未使用者使用烟草的易感性(OR,2.08;95%CI,1.65-2.63;I2=73%)。亚组分析表明,烟草促销、主动参与、被动参与、终生接触烟草内容、接触超过 2 个平台上的烟草内容以及青少年和年轻人接触烟草内容与类似的关联。
研究结果表明,联邦监管机构应制定一项减少社交媒体上烟草内容的综合策略。这些行动可能会对青少年和年轻人接触 protobacco 内容产生下游影响,并最终影响烟草使用行为。