Abstract

BackgroundTobacco advertisements have been banned in Hong Kong, but low intensity e-cigarette (EC) advertising can still be found in various media outlets. We investigated the associations between exposure to EC advertising and susceptibility to EC use in adolescents who had never used cigarettes or ECs, with potential mediation by attitudes towards ECs and the tobacco industry.MethodsThe School-based Smoking Survey 2016/17 assessed exposure to EC advertising in the past 30 days, attitudes towards ECs and the tobacco industry, susceptibility to EC use, and other covariates. Generalised linear mixed models and multiple mediation analysis methods were used in data analyses.ResultsAmong 7082 students (mean age 14.9 years), 28.8% reported exposure to EC advertising. Exposure was associated with being uncertain about the harm of EC use, being tolerant towards ECs, believing the tobacco industry is respectable, and being susceptible to EC use; the magnitudes of these associations increased with the number of types of advertising exposed (0, 1, and ≥ 2) (all p-values < 0.01). These attitudinal factors were in turn associated with EC use susceptibility (all p-values < 0.001). The perception that tobacco companies make youth smoke was not associated with the advertising exposure or EC use susceptibility. Of the total effects of EC advertising on use susceptibility, only 16.6% were mediated by attitudinal factors: perceived harm (3.1%), attitudes towards ECs (8.2%), and attitudes towards the tobacco industry (4.9%).ConclusionsEven exposure to low intensity EC advertising was associated with susceptibility to EC use in adolescents who had never used cigarettes or ECs. The association was weakly mediated by tolerant attitudes towards ECs and the tobacco industry. The government should reinforce the regulations on EC advertising to protect adolescent health.

Highlights

  • Tobacco advertisements have been banned in Hong Kong, but low intensity e-cigarette (EC) advertising can still be found in various media outlets

  • The present results showed that exposure to EC advertising was associated with tolerant attitudes towards ECs and less perceived harm in adolescents who had never used ECs or cigarettes, which was consistent with previous research [31, 48, 49]; the magnitudes of these associations increased with the number of types of EC advertising exposed

  • Such exposure was associated with tolerant attitudes towards ECs and the tobacco industry, which was in turn associated with use susceptibility

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Summary

Introduction

Tobacco advertisements have been banned in Hong Kong, but low intensity e-cigarette (EC) advertising can still be found in various media outlets. We investigated the associations between exposure to EC advertising and susceptibility to EC use in adolescents who had never used cigarettes or ECs, with potential mediation by attitudes towards ECs and the tobacco industry. While the tobacco industry promoted ECs as safer alternatives for adults, they have become more popular than conventional tobacco products among youth. EC advertising targets minors as young as 12-yearolds, [9] and exposure to EC advertisements on television increased by 256% from 2011 to 2013 in US adolescents [10]. ECs are increasingly promoted in social media targeting youth, such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube [11,12,13]. In US high school students, less than half (43.2%) perceived that EC use was harmful in 2017 [15]; current EC use increased by 135% from 11.7% in 2017 to 27.5% in 2019 [16, 17]

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