An examination of the shift in school-level clustering of US adolescent electronic cigarette use and its multilevel correlates, 2011-2013

Health & Place
Daniel J Corsi, Adam M Lippert

Abstract

The percent of US high school students reporting use of electronic cigarettes (i.e., e-cigarettes) tripled in recent years. Little is known about the temporal shifts in school-level e-cigarette prevalence or the multilevel correlates of teen e-cigarette use. Using multilevel regression techniques and data from the 2011 and 2013 US National Youth Tobacco Surveys, we investigate how the school-level clustering of e-cigarette use has shifted between 2011 and 2013, whether school-level e-cigarette use is associated with individual-level use, and whether this association is explained by perceptions of harm attributed to e-cigarettes. Results indicate that school-level clustering of pastmonth e-cigarette use increased between 2011 and 2013. Multilevel models show that school-level e-cigarette use is positively associated with individual use, with a small proportion of this relationship explained by perceived harm of e-cigarettes. Our findings suggest that schools could have become more differentiated from each other based on their prevalence of e-cigarette use, and that certain types of school environments facilitate e-cigarette use more efficiently than others.

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Citations

Oct 23, 2016·Health & Place·Georgiana BosteanWilliam J McCarthy
Dec 19, 2016·American Journal of Preventive Medicine·Fernando A Wilson, Yang Wang
Mar 17, 2018·Current Addiction Reports·Grace KongSuchitra Krishnan-Sarin
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Sep 23, 2020·Nicotine & Tobacco Research : Official Journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco·Zachary CahnMichael P Eriksen

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