Abstract

Higher weight concerns have been associated with higher cigarette smoking, particularly among women, partly because smoking is perceived to limit appetite for food. E-cigarettes are increasingly used as an alternative to combustible cigarettes and are widely believed to be less harmful than cigarettes. Currently it is not known whether weight concerns are associated with e-cigarette use among young adults. In this study, we tested the association between weight concerns and cigarette and e-cigarette use and use susceptibility among young adults. Cross-sectional data were collected from college students (N = 470; M age = 20.9; SD = 2.1; 65% women). Results indicated that weight concerns were significantly associated with lifetime and current cigarette smoking status, current cigarette smoking frequency and cigarette use susceptibility (among never smokers), adjusting for demographics variables. Weight concerns were not associated with lifetime or current e-cigarette use status or e-cigarette use susceptibility, adjusting for demographics and cigarette use status. However, higher weight concerns were associated with higher frequency of current e-cigarette use, adjusting for demographic variables and current cigarette smoking frequency. These findings imply that even though weight concerns may not motivate e-cigarette use as strongly as cigarette use, weight concerns may influence higher intensity of e-cigarette use among users.

Highlights

  • Since as early as the 1930s, tobacco marketing has directly or indirectly associated cigarette smoking with weight control [1]

  • This study examined the relationships between weight concerns and e-cigarette use and conventional cigarette smoking in a population sample of young adults

  • Higher weight concerns were found to be significantly associated with higher likelihood of lifetime and current cigarette smoking status, current cigarette smoking frequencies and higher cigarette smoking susceptibility among cigarette never smokers, adjusting for demographic variables

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Summary

Introduction

Since as early as the 1930s, tobacco marketing has directly or indirectly associated cigarette smoking with weight control [1]. No study has examined weight concerns as a predictor of e-cigarette use and e-cigarette use susceptibility in a general sample of young adults, after adjusting for the effects of cigarette smoking status. Based on past finding, it was hypothesized that higher weight concerns would be associated with greater likelihood of current cigarette use, experimentation, susceptibility, and higher current cigarette use frequency, after adjusting for demographic variables. We tested the hypotheses that higher weight concerns would be associated with greater likelihood of current e-cigarette use and experimentation; higher current e-cigarette use frequency; and higher e-cigarette use susceptibility, after adjusting for cigarette smoking status and demographic variables (e.g., age, gender, and ethnicity). This was achieved by testing the “gender X weight concerns” interaction effects on e-cigarette use and cigarette smoking

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