Jim Liebelt

Kids with Goals and Supportive Parents Less Likely to Ever Start Vaping

A new study finds that children who have clear goals for their future and supportive parents are much less likely to try either vaping or...
Published Aug 04, 2021
Kids with Goals and Supportive Parents Less Likely to Ever Start Vaping

*The following is excerpted from an online article posted on StudyFinds.

A new study finds that children who have clear goals for their future and supportive parents are much less likely to try either vaping or traditional tobacco products.

“The use of e-cigarettes by young people is at epidemic proportions, with 27% of youth surveyed saying they’d vaped in the last 30 days,” says lead author Nicholas Szoko, M.D., a fellow in the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, in a media release.

"And a lot of the traditional methods we think of for counseling youth on the dangers of tobacco and drug use may not apply to vaping. Pediatricians and parents need a better understanding of what motivates adolescents to eschew e-cigarettes.”

Szoko and his team surveyed nearly 2,500 high school students in the Pittsburgh public school system during their study. Researchers looked at how often these youngsters use e-cigarettes or smoke regular tobacco products and if one of four “protective factors” play a role in their decision to vape or smoke.

Those protective factors include:

  • Future orientation: A person’s beliefs, hopes, and goals for the future
  • Parental monitoring: The relationship and communication between parents and children
  • Social support: The ability to rely on friends and peers
  • School connectedness: The sense of belonging and inclusion at school

The results show that both future orientation and parental monitoring contribute to a 10-25 percent drop in the likelihood children start vaping. Social support or school connectedness did not show any link to young students deciding to use e-cigarettes.

Unlike vaping, all four factors contributed to fewer students using tobacco products.

The findings appear in the journal Pediatrics.

Source: StudyFinds
https://www.studyfinds.org/kids-goals-parents-vaping/

Originally published August 04, 2021.

SHARE