大学生使用社交媒体和电子烟:如何正确识别平台类型影响研究结果

C. Dunlap, Yu Lu, P. Dobbs, Nisha Khanal, Julia Oehlers, M. Cheney
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摘要

本研究的目的是调查大学生如何在社交媒体上发布或分享juul相关内容。使用顺序解释性混合方法设计,目前的JUUL用户(n = 667)在2019年3月完成了一项横断面调查,然后51名参与者在2019年4月完成了亲自随访访谈。调查问题涉及与juul相关的社交媒体帖子和评论历史以及人口统计问题。受访者被要求解释他们的调查结果,然后向他们展示调查结果,并询问他们和其他人没有在社交媒体上发布或评论JUUL的原因。定性数据由两名编码员使用NVivo独立编码,并对主题进行分析。调查参与者(年龄18-24岁,平均年龄20岁,50.5%的女性,80.6%的白人)的回答显示,81%的人在过去一年中没有在社交媒体上发表过juul相关的评论,也没有发布过自己JUULing的照片。然而,受访者表示,他们继续在社交媒体上发布关于JUUL的帖子,但不再使用更多的公共社交媒体账户(例如Facebook);私人Instagram和Snapchat账户被用来发布JUUL使用和以JUUL为重点的内容,而不会损害他们在家人或潜在雇主心目中的个人形象。如何询问社交媒体使用问题对于理解大学生对JUULing和社会规范的推广至关重要。年轻人为了保护自己在社交媒体上的存在感,不让自己出现在juul关注的内容中;因此,JUUL在Snapchat或Finstas等私人社交媒体上的传播可能无法识别,年轻人通过表情包或其他方式使JUUL的使用正常化
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College Students’ Use of Social Media and E-Cigarettes: How Correctly Identifying Platform Type Influences Findings
The purpose of this study was to examine how college students post or share JUUL-related content on social media. Using a sequential explanatory mixed-methods design, current JUUL users (n = 667) completed a cross-sectional survey in March of 2019, then 51 participants completed in-person follow-up interviews in April of 2019. Survey questions asked about JUUL-related social media postings and commenting history as well as demographic questions. Interview participants were asked to explain their survey responses and were then shown the survey results and asked for reasons why they and others did not post or comment about JUUL on social media. Qualitative data were coded independently by two coders using NVivo, and analyzed for themes. Survey participant (ages 18-24, mean age 20 years, 50.5% female, and 80.6% white) responses showed 81% had not posted a JUUL-focused comment on social media and had not posted a picture of themselves JUULing in the past year. However, interviewees reported they had continued to post about JUUL on social media but moved away from more public social media accounts (e.g., Facebook); private Instagram and Snapchat accounts were used to post both JUUL use and JUUL-focused content without risk of damaging their personal image to family or potential employers. How social media use questions are asked is critical for understanding college student promotion of JUULing and social norms. Young adults protect their social media presence by not including themselves in JUUL-focused content; thus, the spread of JUULing through private social media like Snapchat or Finstas may not be identified and young adults normalize JUUL use through memes or
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