Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living, Austin Campus, School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth), Austin, TX 78701, USA.
Center for Tobacco Research, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Jan 28;20(3):2332. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20032332.
Most e-cigarette users report planning to quit, but there is a paucity of evidence-based interventions for e-cigarette cessation. In the absence of interventions for e-cigarette cessation, we sought to understand how and why e-cigarette users attempt to quit on their own. Participants were recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk, an online crowdsourcing platform. Those who reported they had ever used e-cigarettes regularly and had attempted to quit e-cigarette use were eligible for participation. Measures included demographic characteristics, other tobacco product use, e-cigarette device characteristics, barriers to quitting e-cigarettes, and facilitators to quitting e-cigarettes. A content analysis was conducted on twotwo open-ended questions that asked about advice respondents had for others trying to quit vaping and resources they wished they had during their quit attempt. Descriptive analyses were performed (means/standard errors; frequencies/proportions). A total of 89.0% reported using an e-cigarette with nicotine, 20.2% reported a nicotine concentration of 4-6 mg/mL%, 32.8% reported using multiple flavors, and 77.7% reported using their e-cigarette every day or some days. The primary reason reported for wanting to quit e-cigarettes was health concerns (42.2%), and 56.7% reported trying to quit "cold turkey". During quit attempts, 41.0% reported intense cravings and 53.1% reported stress as a trigger. From the content analysis, the most commonly cited suggestion for those wanting to quit e-cigarettes was distractions/hobbies (19.9%), followed by reducing/tapering down nicotine (16.9%). Descriptive information on demographics, e-cigarette use, device characteristics, barriers, facilitators, and quit methods provides a first step in identifying factors that contribute to successful interventions designed for e-cigarette cessation.
大多数电子烟使用者报告计划戒烟,但缺乏基于证据的电子烟戒烟干预措施。在缺乏电子烟戒烟干预措施的情况下,我们试图了解电子烟使用者如何以及为何试图自行戒烟。参与者是从亚马逊 Mechanical Turk 在线众包平台招募的。那些报告说他们曾经经常使用电子烟并试图戒烟的人有资格参加。测量包括人口统计学特征、其他烟草制品使用、电子烟设备特征、戒烟障碍以及戒烟促进因素。对两个开放式问题进行了内容分析,这些问题询问了受访者对试图戒烟的人的建议以及他们在戒烟尝试期间希望拥有的资源。进行了描述性分析(平均值/标准误差;频率/比例)。共有 89.0%的人报告使用含有尼古丁的电子烟,20.2%的人报告尼古丁浓度为 4-6mg/mL%,32.8%的人报告使用多种口味,77.7%的人报告每天或某些日子使用电子烟。报告的戒烟主要原因是健康问题(42.2%),56.7%的人报告试图“突然戒烟”。在戒烟尝试期间,41.0%的人报告强烈的渴望,53.1%的人报告压力是一个触发因素。从内容分析来看,最常被提到的戒烟建议是分散注意力/爱好(19.9%),其次是减少/逐渐减少尼古丁(16.9%)。关于人口统计学、电子烟使用、设备特征、障碍、促进因素和戒烟方法的描述性信息提供了识别有助于成功戒烟的电子烟干预措施的因素的第一步。