Rose Shiho, McGill Bronwyn, Watts Christina, Brooks Alecia, Dessaix Anita, Freeman Becky
The Daffodil Centre, The University of Sydney, A joint venture with Cancer Council NSW, Woolloomooloo, Australia.
Prevention Research Collaboration, Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Mar 13;25(1):990. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22222-4.
With the rapid increase of e-cigarette or vaping use in adolescents, parents can provide unique perspectives to assist in addressing this issue. As research regarding parent experiences of adolescent vaping is generally limited, this study therefore explored parent: (i) perceptions regarding adolescent vaping; and (ii) experiences of addressing their adolescent vaping in the home environment.
Online focus groups (n = 18, with 92 participants) were conducted in April 2023 as part of the Generation Vape research study in Australia. Parents were eligible if they had at least one child aged 14-17 years who attended high school and who lived with them most of the time.
Using reflexive thematic analysis, three main themes were generated: (i) perceptions about own adolescent vaping; (ii) boundaries for vaping; and (iii) conversations between parent and adolescent. Participants largely agreed they do not condone vaping in their children, however, felt resigned that experimenting was inevitable. For some, vaping was a lesser concern compared to other issues, with a view that social vaping is more accepted, as opposed to regular use. Conversations appeared to occur opportunistically, but participants felt uninformed about vapes which was seen as a barrier.
Our findings highlight that adolescent vaping is a complex issue for parents to address. While parents represent one important part in tackling this issue, they feel uninformed nor empowered to do so. Additionally, prevailing perceptions about "acceptable" vaping and misconceptions regarding addiction need to be addressed, with a clear message that any vaping is harmful for adolescents and should be discouraged.
随着青少年电子烟或雾化产品使用的迅速增加,父母能够提供独特视角来协助解决这一问题。由于关于父母对青少年使用电子烟经历的研究通常有限,因此本研究探讨了父母:(i)对青少年使用电子烟的看法;以及(ii)在家庭环境中处理其青少年子女使用电子烟问题的经历。
作为澳大利亚“电子烟一代”研究的一部分,于2023年4月开展了在线焦点小组访谈(n = 18,共92名参与者)。如果父母至少有一名14 - 17岁的孩子,该孩子就读高中且大部分时间与父母同住,则符合参与条件。
采用反思性主题分析法,生成了三个主要主题:(i)对自己孩子使用电子烟的看法;(ii)电子烟使用的界限;以及(iii)父母与青少年之间的对话。参与者在很大程度上表示他们不纵容自己的孩子使用电子烟,然而,感到无奈的是,尝试难以避免。对一些人来说,与其他问题相比,电子烟问题不太受关注,他们认为社交性使用电子烟比经常使用更容易被接受。对话似乎是机会主义式地发生,但参与者觉得对电子烟了解不足,这被视为一个障碍。
我们的研究结果表明,青少年使用电子烟对父母来说是一个复杂的问题。虽然父母是解决这一问题的重要一环,但他们感到信息不足且无权这样做。此外,需要解决关于“可接受”电子烟使用的普遍观念以及对成瘾的误解,要明确传达任何形式的电子烟使用对青少年都是有害的,应该予以劝阻这一信息。