Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4504
Title: New Zealand Youth19 survey: vaping has wider appeal than smoking in secondary school students, and most use nicotine-containing e-cigarettes
Authors: Ball, Jude
Fleming, Theresa
Drayton, Bradley
Sutcliffe, Kylie
Lewycka, Sonia
Clark, Terryann C.
Keywords: tobacco
smoking
e-cigarettes
vaping
adolescent
Issue Date: Dec-2021
Publisher: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Series/Report no.: Nicotine Use;546-553
Abstract: Objective: To investigate smoking and vaping in secondary school students (aged 13–18 years) in New Zealand (NZ) following the introduction of ‘pod’ e-cigarettes, which have been associated with the rapid escalation of youth vaping elsewhere. Methods: Data on smoking and vaping were collected in 2019 as part of a comprehensive youth health survey (N=7,721). Results: Vaping was 2–3 times more prevalent than smoking, with 10% of students vaping regularly (monthly or more often), and 6% weekly or more often, compared with 4% and 2%, respectively, for tobacco smoking. Nicotine-containing e-cigarettes were sometimes or always used by 80% of regular and 90% of weekly vapers. Regular and weekly smoking was rare in low deprivation (affluent) areas, whereas regular and weekly vaping prevalence was similar across the socioeconomic spectrum. More than 80% of ever-vapers (N=2732) reported they were nonsmokers when they first vaped, and 49% of regular vapers (N=718) had never smoked. Conclusions: A significant proportion of New Zealand adolescents, many of whom have never smoked, use nicotine-containing e-cigarettes regularly. Implications for public health: Vaping is less harmful than smoking, but it is not harmless. Public health action is needed to support young non-smokers to remain smokefree and vapefree.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4504
ISSN: 1753-6405.13169
Appears in Collections:VOL 45 NO 6

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