Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Computer Science, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2024 Nov 12;26:e51870. doi: 10.2196/51870.
Co-use of alcohol and e-cigarettes (often called vaping) has been linked with long-term health outcomes, including increased risk for substance use disorder. Co-use may have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Social networking sites may offer insights into current perspectives on polysubstance use.
The aims of this study were to investigate concurrent mentions of vaping and alcohol on Twitter (subsequently rebranded X) during a time of changing vaping regulations in the United States and the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tweets including both vape- and alcohol-related terms posted between October 2019 and September 2020 were analyzed using latent Dirichlet allocation modeling. Distinct topics were identified and described.
Three topics were identified across 6437 tweets: (1) flavors and flavor ban (n=3334, 51.8% of tweets), (2) co-use discourse (n=1119, 17.4%), and (3) availability and access regulation (n=1984, 30.8%). Co-use discussions often portrayed co-use as positive and prosocial. Tweets focused on regulation often used alcohol regulations for comparison. Some focused on the perceived overregulation of vaping (compared to alcohol), while others supported limiting youth access but not at the expense of adult access (eg, stronger age verification over product bans). Across topics, vaping was typically portrayed as less harmful than alcohol use. The benefits of flavors for adult smoking cessation were also discussed. The distribution of topics across time varied across both pre- and post-regulatory change and pre- and post-COVID-19 pandemic declaration periods, suggesting shifts in topic focus salience across time.
Co-use discussions on social media during this time of regulatory change and social upheaval typically portrayed both vaping and alcohol use in a positive light. It also included debates surrounding the differences in regulation of the 2 substances-particularly as it related to limiting youth access. Emergent themes from the analysis suggest that alcohol was perceived as more harmful but less regulated and more accessible to underage youth than vaping products. Frequent discussions and comparisons of the 2 substances as it relates to their regulation emphasize the still-evolving vaping policy landscape. Social media content analyses during times of change may help regulators and policy makers to better understand and respond to common concerns and potential misconceptions surrounding drug-related policies and accessibility.
同时使用酒精和电子烟(通常称为 vaping)与长期健康后果有关,包括增加物质使用障碍的风险。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,这种共同使用可能会加剧。社交网络网站可能会提供有关当前对多药物使用看法的见解。
本研究旨在调查美国电子烟法规变化和 COVID-19 大流行期间,在 X(随后更名为 X)上同时提及 vaping 和酒精的推文。
使用潜在狄利克雷分配模型分析了 2019 年 10 月至 2020 年 9 月期间发布的包含电子烟和酒精相关术语的推文。确定并描述了不同的主题。
在 6437 条推文中确定了三个主题:(1)口味和口味禁令(n=3334,占推文的 51.8%),(2)共同使用话语(n=1119,占 17.4%)和(3)可用性和准入法规(n=1984,占 30.8%)。共同使用的讨论通常将共同使用描绘为积极和有益的。关注法规的推文经常将酒精法规用作比较。一些人关注电子烟的过度监管(与酒精相比),而另一些人则支持限制青少年使用,但不影响成人使用(例如,对产品禁令进行更强的年龄验证)。在各个主题中,通常将 vaping 描绘为比酒精使用危害小。还讨论了口味对成年戒烟的好处。在监管变化前后和 COVID-19 大流行宣布前后的不同时间内,主题的分布有所不同,这表明随着时间的推移,主题重点的变化。
在这段时间的监管变化和社会动荡期间,社交媒体上的共同使用讨论通常以积极的态度描绘 vaping 和酒精的使用。它还包括围绕两种物质的监管差异的辩论,特别是与限制青少年使用有关。分析中出现的新兴主题表明,与 vaping 产品相比,人们认为酒精更有害但监管较少,并且更容易被未成年青少年获得。关于这两种物质的监管的频繁讨论和比较强调了不断发展的电子烟政策格局。在变革时期进行社交媒体内容分析可能有助于监管机构和政策制定者更好地理解和应对与毒品相关政策和可及性有关的常见问题和潜在误解。