2020 design and methods of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Ralph DiGaetanoSylvia DohrmannEthel V TaylorColm D EverardVictoria CastlemanTing YanHeather L KimmelIzabella ZandbergAndrea PiesseJean D OpsomerNicolette BorekMarushka L SilveiraFrost HubbardKristie A TaylorMeLisa R CreamerAnikah H SalimEva SharmaYu-Ching ChengVictoria VignareTammy CookWioletta Szeszel-FedorowiczYumiko SiegfriedCharles CarusiDebra StarkSilvana SkaraAndrew HylandPublished in: Tobacco control (2024)
The Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study is a nationally representative, longitudinal study of the US population on tobacco use and its effects on health, collecting data annually since 2013. The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted in-person survey data collections around the world. In the USA, this included a PATH Study data collection focused on youth (13-17) and young adults (18-19) as well as other US surveys on tobacco use. Given that it was necessary to pause data collection and considering that tobacco-use behaviours could be expected to change along with pandemic-related changes in the social environment, the original design for the 2020 PATH Study data collection for youth and young adults was modified. Also, the PATH Study Adult Telephone Survey was developed to address the need for adult tobacco use monitoring in this unprecedented time. This article describes the modifications made to the 2020 PATH Study design and protocol to provide nationally representative data for youth and adults after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the implications of these modifications for researchers.