University students ’ perceived risk of and intention to use waterpipe tobacco

AbstractEmerging tobacco product use is increasing. We evaluated factors associated with perceived risk of and intention to use waterpipe tobacco by surveying students at a large university in the southeastern U.S. (N= 667). Proportional odds modeling assessed whether demographic characteristics and social acceptability are associated with perceived risk of waterpipe tobacco use; and if these factors and perceived risk are related to intention to use waterpipe tobacco. Participants who perceived waterpipe tobacco to be more socially acceptable had lower odds of perceiving it as risky (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.50 –0.68). Compared with never users, former tobacco users and current users had lower odds of perceiving waterpipe tobacco use as risky (95% CI 0.38–0.80 and 0.28–0.63, respectively). Similarly, students with greater perceived social acceptability scores had higher odds of intending to use water pipe tobacco (95% CI 1.41–2.63), while those who perceived greater risk had lower odds of intending to use it (95% CI 0.34–0.64). Compared with never users, former users had higher odds of intending to use waterpipe tobacco (95% CI 1.42–7.21). Among those who had ever used waterpipe tobacco, 9 0% reported ‘to socialize’ as the most frequent reason for deciding to do so. Findings underscore the need for future prevention efforts.
Source: Health Education Research - Category: Research Source Type: research