Introduction: While research has documented the rapid rise in youth disposable e-cigarette use, understanding of the distinct characteristics and behaviors of youth who use these devices remains limited.Methods: This cross-sectional study analysed data from the 2023 National Youth Tobacco Survey, a nationally representative survey of U.S. students grades 6-12 (N=22,069).Analyses were conducted in 2025.Participants were classified into six mutually exclusive groups based on their current tobacco product use: predominantly disposable e-cigarettes and no cigarettes, predominantly non-disposable e-cigarettes and no cigarettes, cigarettes only, concurrent use of cigarettes with disposable e-cigarettes, concurrent use of cigarettes with non-disposable ecigarettes, or no use.Measures included e-cigarette use patterns, nicotine dependence indicators, exposure to e-cigarette content on social media, social norms, and psychological distress.Weighted analyses and multinomial logistic regression were performed.Results: Youth who predominantly used disposable e-cigarettes reported significantly higher rates of nicotine-containing product use (81.9% vs 49.6%) and fruit flavour preference compared to those who use non-disposable e-cigarettes.Those who predominantly used disposable e-cigarettes without cigarettes reported fewer smoking peers but similar numbers of e-cigarette-using peers compared to those who use cigarettes and e-cigarettes concurrently.'Getting high from nicotine' was more commonly reported than flavour availability as a motivation across all e-cigarette use groups.Relative to non-use, predominant disposable ecigarette use without cigarettes was significantly associated with daily social media exposure (Relative Risk Ratio RRR=2.1),peer e-cigarette use (RRR=1.2),home e-cigarette exposure (RRR=1.2),and severe psychological distress (RRR=2.3).Concurrent use of cigarettes and ecigarettes showed the strongest associations with dependence indicators and social exposure across multiple domains.Conclusions: Youth who predominantly used disposable e-cigarettes were characterised by nicotine-seeking behaviour and social media influence, while those who concurrently used cigarettes and disposable e-cigarettes showed elevated risk indicators across multiple domains.Prevention strategies should be differentiated to address the specific risk profiles of groups with different use patterns.
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Giang Thu Vu
The University of Queensland
Tianze Sun
The University of Queensland
JK Connor
The University of Queensland
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
The University of Queensland
National Health and Medical Research Council
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Vu et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ca134b883daed6ee0952b7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2026.108352
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