Cigar use misreporting among youth: Data from the 2009 Youth Tobacco Survey, Virginia

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Abstract

Introduction: Researchers have suggested that adolescents' cigar use has increased beyond the rates being reported on tobacco use surveys. Differences in content knowledge and everyday colloquial expressions may be responsible for misreporting of cigar use. To determine whether cigar use is subject to systematic misreporting, we compared reports of general cigar use ("During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke cigars, little cigars, and cigarillos?") with reports of brand-specific use ("During the past 30 days, on how many days did you smoke Black & Milds?") among a statewide sample of adolescents in Virginia. Methods: We examined data from 3,093 youth who completed the 2009 Virginia Youth Tobacco Survey to determine differences in the rate of misreported cigar use (ie, those who reported Black & Mild use but did not report cigar, little cigar, or cigarillo use) for youth with varying demographic profiles and conditions. Results: More than one-half of Black & Mild users (57.3%) did not report general cigar use. Cigar use misreporting was most prevalent among older adolescents, blacks/African Americans, current users of cigarettes and hookah, and youth diagnosed with asthma. Conclusion General cigar-use items on statewide surveys significantly underestimate the prevalence of youth cigar use. More comprehensive measures of cigar use may be beneficial in assessing tobacco use among groups most likely to misreport their tobacco use, such as African Americans and youth diagnosed with asthma.

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APA

Nasim, A., Blank, M. D., Berry, B. M., & Eissenberg, T. (2012). Cigar use misreporting among youth: Data from the 2009 Youth Tobacco Survey, Virginia. Preventing Chronic Disease, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.5888/pcd9.110084

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