Vaping among teens visualizations Data source The data for the following visualizations is fromWashington State Department of Health Healthy Youth Surveyand is provided for this presentation byPublic Health - Seattle & King County. Use caution when interpreting the data. Use the links to the data so...
When teens self‐report their tobacco, vaping, and marijuana use, the results correlate with urine biomarkers, researchers have found. There is no objective biomarker data in this area, so researchers wanted to make this comparison, and it turns out that just asking the question will...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administrationis taking actionagainst e-cigarette companies out of fear that vaping by teens is skyrocketing.New datafrom this year’s Monitoring the Future survey suggests it’s true. Between 2017 and 2018, the nationally representative survey of 13,850 teenagers...
Intent-to-treat 7dpp abstinence rates (missing data assumed vaping) were higher than expected with an overall quit rate of 45%, and 41% for Calls only, 43% for Calls+mHealth, 48% for Calls+NRT, and 48% for Calls+NRT+mHealth (Table 2). Estimated effects of each component (mailed ...
One of the first cases to be highlighted by the media was a male adolescent. This brought more attention to the growing use of vapor devices by adolescents that seems to have reversed the decreasing trend for smoking. Using the 2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health data for 12th g...
[32]. However, a study on Glasgow teens indicated that smoking initiation was more present in non-smokers who had exposure to smoking peers compared to those who had little social influence from smokers[33]. Presumably, both groups would be exposed to similar outside media influence and so ...
The study, which will be published online Aug. 11 in theJournal of Adolescent Health, is the first to examine connections between youth vaping and COVID-19 using U.S. population-based data collected during the pandemic. Among young people who were tested for the virus that causes COVID-19...
After vaping and alcohol, the most common thing teens use is marijuana, the survey found. About 1 in 4 students said they’d used marijuana at least once in the past year. It was more common in older kids — about 1 in 17 high school seniors said they use marijuana every day. ...
The 2019 data also revealed a continued high prevalence of marijuana use among young adults, who are 19 to 22 years old. In 2018, 43% of this group—regardless of college attendance—reported using marijuana in the past year, and this percentage was unchanged in 2019. Particularly notable is...
The data showed that although young people who vaped were more likely to be physically active, they were also more likely to report experiencing extreme chronic stress in their lives. Dr To said: “Chronic stress can lead to mental health conditions such as anxiety and depression. It’s import...