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Effect of a State-Level Vaping Prevention Campaign on Beliefs and Behaviors in Young People. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Vermont "Unhyped" vaping prevention campaign successfully increased adolescents' perception of risk related to vaping, with 49.3% of aware participants recognizing the dangers compared to 24.3% of controls.
  • Participants aged 12-17 who were aware of the campaign showed reduced willingness to try vaping, with only 15.8% expressing interest in using a vape product, compared to 40.1% of controls.
  • While the campaign positively influenced risk perceptions, it did not significantly affect actual vaping behaviors in the long term.

Article Abstract

Background: Vaping prevention media campaigns have promising effects on harm perceptions but have yet to demonstrate impacts on vaping behaviors in young people. The goal of this study was to evaluate the effect of Vermont's vaping prevention campaign (Unhyped) on vaping-related beliefs and behaviors.

Methods: Data come from Waves 5 (Winter 2020) and 9 (Winter 2021) ( = 433) of the Policy and Communication Evaluation Vermont study, a longitudinal online cohort study of adolescents and young adults ages 12-25. Analyses examined associations between awareness of Unhyped in 2020 and outcomes in 2020 and 2021. Primary analyses compared participants aged 12-17 (campaign target) who reported awareness of Unhyped to propensity score-matched controls.

Results: In 2020, more adolescents aware of the Unhyped campaign perceived great risk from weekly vaping compared with matched controls (49.3% vs. 24.3%;  = 0.019). Adolescents aware of Unhyped in 2020 were also less likely than matched controls to report willingness to try a vapor product in the next year (15.8% vs. 40.1%;  = 0.048) or use one if offered by a friend (21.4% vs. 49.1%;  = 0.031) in 2021. There was no relationship between brand awareness and vaping behaviors in 2020 or 2021.

Conclusions: Although there were no effects of awareness of Vermont's Unhyped campaign on vaping behaviors, the campaign was effective in altering short-term risk perceptions and reducing susceptibility to vape in adolescents one year later.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10826084.2024.2446741DOI Listing

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