Abstract
BackgroundAs youth e-cigarette use has surged in the last several years, teachers and school administrators have reported challenges addressing student use of emerging e-cigarette products on school property. While federal policy prohibits smoking in U.S. schools that receive federal funding, school e-cigarette bans only exist where states or localities have acted. Little is known about school staff experiences with implementing these relatively new policies; this study examines associations between school e-cigarette policies and trainings on school staff awareness and intervention on student e-cigarette use.MethodsA national convenience sample of 1,526 U.S. middle- and high-school teachers and administrators was surveyed in November-December 2018. Among respondents who provided their job title and indicated that they worked in a school rather than a district (n = 1,480, response rate = 97.0%), separate logistic regressions examine associations of school policies and policy training with e-cigarette awareness and intervention on student e-cigarette use.ResultsDespite being the most popular e-cigarette at the time, fewer than half (47.5%) of respondents identified an image of a JUUL device as an e-cigarette. However, respondents reporting the presence of e-cigarette policies in their schools had higher odds of recognizing e-cigarettes (OR = 3.85, p<0.01), including photo recognition of JUUL (OR = 1.90, p<0.001). Respondents reporting e-cigarette policies also had higher odds of reporting intervention on student e-cigarette use (communicating with students about e-cigarette avoidance: OR = 2.32, p<0.001; reporting students had been caught using e-cigarettes at school: OR = 1.54, p<0.05). Among respondents reporting a school e-cigarette policy, those trained on the policy had higher odds of JUUL photo recognition (OR = 1.54, p<0.01). Respondents trained on e-cigarette policies also had higher odds of reporting intervention (communicating: OR = 3.89, p<0.001; students caught using e-cigarettes: OR = 2.71, p<0.001).ConclusionsAs new tobacco products enter the market, school policies may be important tools to raise school personnel awareness of and intervention on emerging e-cigarette product use. However, policy adoption alone is not sufficient; policy training may further aid in recognition and intervention upon student use of e-cigarettes at school.
Highlights
E-cigarette use among adolescents in the United States (US) has surged in recent years, with the Surgeon General declaring it an epidemic in 2018 [1]
Despite being the most popular e-cigarette at the time, fewer than half (47.5%) of respondents identified an image of a JUUL device as an e-cigarette
Respondents reporting the presence of e-cigarette policies in their schools had higher odds of recognizing ecigarettes (OR = 3.85, p
Summary
E-cigarette use among adolescents in the United States (US) has surged in recent years, with the Surgeon General declaring it an epidemic in 2018 [1]. While e-cigarette use among high school students decreased in 2020, it remains at epidemic levels with more than one in five young people currently using e-cigarettes [3]. Much of the recent increase in e-cigarette use has been attributed to the use of JUUL, a pod-based e-cigarette introduced in 2015 that gained popularity among youth through its marketing tactics that appealed to young people [4, 5]. The popularity of JUUL among young people has been of particular concern due to its high level of nicotine, especially given that JUUL delivers nicotine at a rate similar to combustible cigarettes [9]. As youth e-cigarette use has surged in the last several years, teachers and school administrators have reported challenges addressing student use of emerging e-cigarette products on school property. Little is known about school staff experiences with implementing these relatively new policies; this study examines associations between school e-cigarette policies and trainings on school staff awareness and intervention on student e-cigarette use
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