对学生药剂师的电子烟调查显示了令人不安的结果

Jamie L. McConaha, Phil Lunney, J. Kitzen, J. Pergolizzi, Robert W. Taylor, R. Raffa
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在美国,与“电子烟”相关的死亡人数的上升引发了严重的担忧。存在一定程度风险的理由是,电子烟可能提供了从吸传统香烟到危害较小的替代品的“反向通道”。但使用者真的是吸烟者吗?我们开发了一项电子在线调查,以收集有关药学学生目标研究人群中电子烟使用情况的数据。该调查使用谷歌表格匿名收集回复。我们调查了精通医疗保健的学生使用电子烟的情况,以及他们的医疗服务提供者是否意识到他们使用电子烟。在134名受访的药学专业学生中,尽管近四分之一(23.9%)的受访者表示使用电子烟,但只有2.0%的人表示以前经常使用香烟,28%的人使用含有尼古丁的烟盒,只有11.2%的人尝试过并想要戒烟。大多数人(64.1%)报告说,他们的医疗保健提供者没有询问这种使用情况,受访者也没有自愿提供这些信息。这项试点调查的结果显示,在有健康意识的药学专业学生中,电子烟的使用率很高,他们不支持受访者这样做是为了戒烟的观点。观察到大多数学生的医疗保健提供者没有询问他们的电子烟使用情况,再加上发现用户没有自愿提供他们的电子烟行为,这表明在获得病史时应该包括这些信息。需要进一步的研究来确定哪些行为因素可能在学生医疗保健专业人员的这种决策中发挥作用。
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E-Cigarette Survey among Student Pharmacists Reveals Troubling Results
The rise in “vaping”-associated deaths in the United States raises serious concerns. A justification for some level of risk is that e-cigarettes might provide a “reverse-gateway” from smoking traditional cigarettes to a less-harmful alternative. But are users actually smokers? We developed an electronic on-line survey to gather data regarding e-cigarette usage in a target study population of pharmacy students. The survey was created using Google Forms to collect the responses anonymously. We surveyed medical-savvy healthcare students about their e-cigarette use, and whether or not their healthcare providers were aware of their e-cigarette use. Although nearly one-fourth of a convenience sampling of 134 pharmacy-student respondents (23.9%) reported using e-cigarettes, only 2.0% reported prior regular cigarette use, 28% used cartridges containing nicotine and only 11.2% had tried and wanted to quit. The majority (64.1%) reported that their healthcare providers did not ask about such use, and respondents did not volunteer this information. The results of this pilot survey reveal a significant e-cigarette use among health-aware pharmacy students, and they do not support the notion that the respondents do so to quit smoking. The observation that most of the students’ healthcare providers did not inquire about their e-cigarette use, coupled with the finding that users did not volunteer their vaping behavior, suggests that the information should be included when getting a medical history. Further research is needed to determine what behavioral factors may play a role in this type of decision-making among student healthcare professionals.
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