E-cigarettes use prior to smoking combustible cigarettes among dual users: The roles of social anxiety and E-cigarette outcome expectancies

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.106854Get rights and content

Highlights

  • Some individuals use e-cigarettes prior to smoking combustible cigarettes.

  • Among dual users, social anxiety was related to using e-cigarettes first.

  • E-cigarette first users reported greater negative reinforcement.

  • E-cigarette first users reported greater weight control expectancies.

  • Social anxiety was indirectly related to first use type via outcome expectancies.

Abstract

E-cigarette use is prevalent, and rates of use continue to increase. Although e-cigarettes are often used to help combustible users quit or reduce smoking, some use e-cigarettes in the absence of combustible cigarettes, increasing risk for smoking combustible cigarettes. Yet, little research has examined individual vulnerability factors implicated in transitioning from exclusive e-cigarettes use to dual use of combustible cigarettes. Social anxiety may be one such factor given it is related to a variety of negative smoking-related outcomes. Thus, the current study tested whether social anxiety was related to using e-cigarettes before smoking combustibles among 226 current undergraduate dual users (use both e-cigarettes and combustible cigarettes). Most dual users reported initiating with e-cigarettes (67%). Those who initiated with e-cigarettes reported statistically significantly greater negative reinforcement (d = 0.59) and weight control expectancies (d = 0.37) and greater social anxiety (d = 0.37) than those who initiated with combustibles. Social anxiety was indirectly related to e-cigarette initiation via negative and weight control expectancies. Findings add to a growing literature that dual users initiated with e-cigarettes and extend understanding of this phenomenon by identifying that socially anxious persons may be especially vulnerable to doing so, at least partially due to expectations regarding e-cigarette’s ability to manage negative affect and/or weight.

Section snippets

Participants and procedures

Participants were recruited through the psychology department participant pool from Louisiana State University from January 19, 2019-December 3, 2019 for a larger study on e-cigarette use. Of the 465 who completed the study, 375 endorsed using combustible cigarettes, 149 of whom were excluded due to: endorsing e-cigarette and combustible initiation in the same year (n = 136) obfuscating whether e-cigarette or combustible use occurred first in that year1

Results

Means, standard deviations, and bivariate correlations among study variables appear in Table 1. Social anxiety was statistically significantly correlated with negative reinforcement, weight control, and positive reinforcement e-cigarette expectancies and with distress. Table 2 presents differences among dual users by initiation type on study variables. E-cigarette cigarette initiators reported statistically significantly greater negative reinforcement and weight control expectancies. As

Discussion

Findings add to a growing literature that some dual users initiated with e-cigarettes and later went on to smoke combustible cigarettes (Spindle et al., 2017) and extend understanding of this phenomenon by identifying that social anxiety was robustly related to e-cigarette initiation after controlling for variance attributable to demographic variables, tobacco-related variables, alcohol problem severity, and distress. It may be that socially anxious young adults are more willing to try

Role of Funding Sources

Dr. Buckner receives funding from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' Graduate Psychology Education (GPE) Program (Grant D40HP33350), Our Lady of the Lake Hospital, and Capital Area Human Services District. Dr. Zvolensky receives fees from Elsevier, Guilford Press, and is supported by grants from NIH, American Cancer Society, and Cancer Research Institute of Texas. The funding sponsors have no involvement in study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data, writing the

Contributors

Dr. Buckner and Dr. Zvolensky designed the study and wrote the protocol. Dr. Buckner conducted the statistical analysis. All authors contributed to and have approved the final manuscript.

Declaration of Competing Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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