(Lindsay Fox/EcigaretteReviewed.com)

‘Canada needs to step it up’ to prevent youth from vaping, says Kelowna researcher

The number of Canadian teens using e-cigarettes is among highest in the world

A Kelowna-based researcher says Canada is not doing enough to stop young people from starting to vape.

Laura Struik is an assistant professor with the University of B.C. Okanagan campus School of Nursing and a Canadian Cancer Society Emerging Scholar who researches nicotine dependence, cancer prevention and behaviour change.

Struik is speaking out after a recent Health Canada survey found that 29 per-cent of students from Grades 7 to 12 have used an e-cigarette and 17 per-cent of youth surveyed vaped in the past month.

The number of Canadian teens using e-cigarettes is among highest in the world, which Struik calls a “disheartening” statistic.

The UBCO researcher explained that young adults are disproportionately at risk of harm caused by vaping.

“Exposure at this age alters natural brain development and impacts lung health early on.”

Recent research led by Struik found that Canadian government-funded campaigns directed at young people to prevent vaping uptake lags behind resources available to youth in the USA.

The research found that Canada has only two anti-vaping initiatives across the country, compared to 44 government funded programs in the USA.

Struik’s research also found that a person’s decision to start vaping is influenced by various factors, including, mental health and coping with stress, social norms and popularity of vaping, the belief that vaping is “cool,” the lack of school policies to address vaping, and the fact that there is vague information on the harms of vaping (e.g., “could be harmful”).

“Relying almost solely on telling teens about the potential physical health harms of vaping as a reason to not vape is likely going to fall flat, and recent youth-driven evidence confirms this,” said Struik.

“In the end, the evidence reveals that Canada needs to step it up when it comes to vaping prevention programs aimed at our youth…These prevention programs must be informed and driven by Canadian youth themselves to truly tackle this issue,” said Struik.


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“Youth and young adults are disproportionately at risk for the harmful effects of vaping because exposure at this age alters natural brain development and impacts lung health early on.

“As a result, there has been a long-standing urgency to intervene over the last few years, and we wanted to know what has been done across our nation.”

She led a recent study published last month in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine that examined campaigns directed at young people to prevent vaping uptake.

For this study, a team of young trainees in Struik’s lab examined government-funded vaping prevention campaigns in Canada and the United States.

A key aspect of public health measures is to develop prevention campaigns to motivate people to make lifestyle choices that benefit themselves or society.

The researchers analyzed 46 different campaigns to determine what kind of messaging was being used to influence the behavioural decisions of young people.

They found that many spoke about the potentially harmful effects of vaping on the lungs.

Struik says there is room to incorporate more meaningful and comprehensive approaches in prevention efforts.

“We know from previous research that vaping uptake is influenced by various intersecting factors, including, but not limited to, mental health, self-efficacy, social norms, environmental factors, knowledge and so forth,” she said.

“So, relying almost solely on telling teens about the potential physical health harms of vaping as a reason to not vape is likely going to fall flat, and recent youth-driven evidence confirms this.”

In her latest study, published this month in Addictive Behaviors Reports, Struik found that Canadian youth who vaped reported a variety of factors that supported their decision to take up vaping, including the belief that vaping was cool, and helped them cope with stress, the normalization of vaping among their peers, the lack of school policies to address vaping, and the fact that there is vague information on the harms of vaping (e.g., “could be harmful”).

She also notes that Canada lacks intervention campaigns compared to the United States. Of the 46 unique vaping prevention campaigns in her study, only two were identified in Canada – one at the federal level and one at the provincial level.

“In the end, the evidence reveals that Canada needs to step it up when it comes to vaping prevention programs aimed at our youth,” Struik added.

And these prevention programs must be informed and driven by Canadian youth themselves to truly tackle this issue.”

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