The Development and Testing of a Point-of-Sale E-Cigarette Health Communication Campaign.
Erin L SutfinAllison J LazardKimberly G WagonerJessica L KingJennifer Cornacchione RossKimberly D WisemanElizabeth N OrlanCynthia K SuerkenDavid M ReboussinMark WolfsonSeth M NoarBeth A ReboussinPublished in: Health communication (2023)
Adolescents and young adults continue to use e-cigarettes, and communication campaigns are needed to decrease use among these populations. We developed and tested a point-of-sale communication campaign focused on e-cigarette chemical exposure. We developed messages based on formative research and tested them (versus text-only messages) in a nationally-representative online survey among adolescents and young adults (16-25) (Phase 1). Based on survey findings, we selected a message focused on nicotine and brain development for the point-of-sale trial (Phase 2). We then conducted a cluster-randomized trial at six gas stations with convenience stores, randomly assigned to the intervention (messages displayed) or no message control condition. We conducted intercept surveys with repeated cross-sectional samples of 50 participants (ages 16-25) per store, at baseline and a four-week follow-up. Phase 1 included 1,636 participants in the online study. Intervention messages were rated as more attention grabbing than plain text messages ( p < .05), though were rated similarly on other outcomes. Exposure to intervention messages resulted in larger changes from pre- to posttest for beliefs about addiction and relative harms versus cigarettes ( p < .05). Phase 2 included 586 participants in the point-of-sale study. Real-world campaign exposure was low (31.8%), and no differences were found between conditions. E-cigarette prevention messages focused on nicotine's impact on brain development show promise. However, garnering attention for communication campaigns in saturated point-of-sale environments, often dominated by tobacco advertising, is challenging. Future efforts should utilize additional communication channels to directly target adolescents and young adults.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- cross sectional
- randomized controlled trial
- replacement therapy
- healthcare
- public health
- health information
- mental health
- study protocol
- clinical trial
- resting state
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- climate change
- blood brain barrier
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- room temperature
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- genetic diversity