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Completed OTHER RESEARCH-RELATED NIH (US)

Identifying and examining the effects of source and presentation on responses to electronic cigarette public education messages in young adult vapers and non-vapers

$1.52M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Massachusetts Med Sch Worcester
Country United States
Start Date Jan 01, 2024
End Date Dec 31, 2025
Duration 730 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10793062
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY E-cigarette use (vaping) in 18-24-year-olds is a public health crisis. It is an urgent public health priority to communicate to young adults about the health harm of vaping to stop and prevent them from vaping. However, effective communication has become challenging in the new age of

health misinformation and low trust in health experts. My goal is to investigate the role of a trusted source and strategic message presentation to increase young adults’ acceptance of e- cigarette education messages to impact their behavior. In this two-phased study, I will determine an optimal source and message presentation type for young adult vapers and non-vapers,

respectively (K99) and examine the effects of messages optimized for source and presentation on young adults’ vaping cessation and vaping prevention (R00). In phase 1 (K99), I will use a multi-method approach to examine two source (expert and peer) and two message presentation types (one-sided and two-sided) to identify the optimal message type for each vaping status

population. First, I will use crowdsourcing testing to collect self-report measures on message acceptance, source trust, message reactance, and harm perceptions. Second, I will use psychophysiological testing to measure participants’ eye-tracking, heart rate, and skin conductance to assess their visual attention, orienting responses, and arousal during message

exposure. I will produce a single dataset integrating the crowdsourced and psychophysiological data to determine the optimal source and presentation type for vapers and non-vapers. In phase 2 (R00), I will use a text messaging intervention in a randomized trial to examine the behavioral effects of messages optimized for source and presentation to one’s vaping status (vapers and

non-vapers). Participants in each vaping status will be randomized to either the treatment (receiving e-cigarette education messages with a source and presentation type optimized to one’s vaping status) or control arm (receiving non-tobacco health messages) via text messaging over the course of 6 months. I will examine vaping cessation rates among vapers and vaping

initiation rates among non-vapers. Results will inform the public health communication campaign development and may apply to other public education campaigns to reduce tobacco use in young people.

All Grantees

University of Massachusetts Med Sch Worcester

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