Tan Andy S L, Mercincavage Melissa, Young William J, Hrywna Mary, Delnevo Cristine D, Strasser Andrew A
University of Pennsylvania, Annenberg School for Communication, Philadelphia, PA, United States; University of Pennsylvania, Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, Philadelphia, PA, United States; Penn Medicine Abramson Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Rutgers Institute for Nicotine and Tobacco Studies, New Brunswick, NJ, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2024 Aug 1;261:111291. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111291. Epub 2024 Apr 12.
We assessed adults' perceived relative harm and addictiveness of products using FDA-authorized modified risk tobacco products (MRTP) claims and associations with intentions to use MRTPs.
Data were from the May 2022 Rutgers Omnibus study among US 18-45-year-old adults (n=2964), collected by the Rutgers Institute for Nicotine and Tobacco Studies (INTS). Outcomes were perceived relative harm and addictiveness versus a typical cigarette and intentions to use a product stating a reduced harm claim (General Snus) or a reduced exposure claim (VLN King). We conducted regression analyses of associations between perceived relative harm and addictiveness and intentions to use each product, stratified by smoking status.
The minority of participants perceived products with a reduced harm claim as much less harmful vs. cigarettes (21 %, 19 %, 7 %, and 8 % among persons who smoked daily, smoked some days, formerly smoked, and never smoked respectively) and products with a reduced exposure claim as much less addictive vs. cigarettes (24 %, 26 %, 14 %, 20 % respectively). Perceived lower relative harm and addictiveness were significantly associated with higher intentions to use products stating reduced harm or reduced exposure claim across all smoking statuses with one exception (relative addictiveness was not associated with intention to use products stating the reduced harm claim among persons who formerly smoked).
Two current FDA-authorized MRTP claims were not effective in conveying that MRTPs were less harmful or addictive than cigarettes to most participants. Perceiving products as less harmful or addictive were significantly associated with intentions to use MRTPs.
我们评估了成年人对使用美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)授权的改良风险烟草产品(MRTP)声明的产品的相对危害和成瘾性的认知,以及与使用MRTP的意图之间的关联。
数据来自2022年5月罗格斯大学对美国18至45岁成年人(n = 2964)进行的综合研究,由罗格斯尼古丁与烟草研究所以及(INTS)收集。结果指标为与普通香烟相比的感知相对危害和成瘾性,以及使用声称危害降低(通用鼻烟)或接触减少(VLN King)产品的意图。我们按吸烟状况分层,对感知相对危害和成瘾性与使用每种产品的意图之间的关联进行了回归分析。
少数参与者认为声称危害降低的产品比香烟危害小得多(每日吸烟者、有时吸烟者、曾经吸烟者和从不吸烟者中分别为21%、19%、7%和8%),声称接触减少的产品比香烟成瘾性小得多(分别为24%、26%、14%、20%)。在所有吸烟状况下,除了一个例外(曾经吸烟者中,相对成瘾性与使用声称危害降低产品的意图无关),感知到较低的相对危害和成瘾性与使用声称危害降低或接触减少产品的较高意图显著相关。
目前FDA授权的两项MRTP声明未能有效地向大多数参与者传达MRTP比香烟危害更小或成瘾性更低的信息。将产品视为危害更小或成瘾性更低与使用MRTP的意图显著相关。