Saul Shiffman, Sooyong Kim, Nicholas I Goldenson, Mark A Sembower
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Adults who smoke cigarettes (AWS) who switch to electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) are likely to reduce their health risks.Objectives: To explore ENDS-users' readiness to stop smoking (RTSS) when adopting ENDS, the prospective association of RTSS and switching away from smoking (past-30-day abstinence), and the role of frequency of JUUL use in switching.Methods: Analyses used data from a naturalistic 2-year longitudinal study of 17,393 AWS (55.4% male) who had purchased a JUUL Starter Kit.Results: Only 20% were planning to stop smoking within 7 days at baseline but had the highest likelihood of switching, 70% at Month-24 (vs. in a year or more: OR = 2.33; 95%CI = 2.13-2.55). Those planning to stop smoking within 30 days (24%), 6 months (24%) or a year or more (27%) had switch rates of 53 ~ 59% at Month-24; those who planned never to quit (6%) had 51% switch rates. Daily ENDS use was prospectively associated with the highest likelihood of subsequent switching (vs. infrequent: OR = 1.68; 95%CI = 1.60-1.77); frequent users (≥20 days/month) also had higher switch rates (OR = 1.22; 95%CI = 1.15-1.28). Descriptively, participants higher on RTSS were more likely to be daily or frequent users, but frequency of use neither interacted with RTSS, nor mediated its association with switching.Conclusions: Most ENDS adopters were not ready to stop smoking, and would not be candidates for cessation treatment. However, a majority - even of those never planning to quit - were abstinent from cigarettes two years later. ENDS may facilitate smoking abstinence in populations not reached by traditional cessation interventions.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse (AJDAA) is an international journal published six times per year and provides an important and stimulating venue for the exchange of ideas between the researchers working in diverse areas, including public policy, epidemiology, neurobiology, and the treatment of addictive disorders. AJDAA includes a wide range of translational research, covering preclinical and clinical aspects of the field. AJDAA covers these topics with focused data presentations and authoritative reviews of timely developments in our field. Manuscripts exploring addictions other than substance use disorders are encouraged. Reviews and Perspectives of emerging fields are given priority consideration.
Areas of particular interest include: public health policy; novel research methodologies; human and animal pharmacology; human translational studies, including neuroimaging; pharmacological and behavioral treatments; new modalities of care; molecular and family genetic studies; medicinal use of substances traditionally considered substances of abuse.