Background As US electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) flavour policies became increasingly restrictive during 2020–2023, flavoured e-cigarette use by the youth might have shifted. Methods US eighth, 10th and 12th graders in the Monitoring the Future study assessed the past 12-month nicotine vaping by flavour, in annual cross-sectional surveys over 2020–2023 (n=91 220). Among the past 12-month users (n=17 761), the e-cigarette flavour youth reported using most often was analysed by year, demographic/vaping pattern and year × demographic/vaping interaction using log-binomial regression. Results Among all respondents, past 12-month vaping of non-tobacco flavoured and tobacco/unflavoured products both declined over 2020–2023. Among past 12-month users, the proportion of youth who vaped a non-tobacco flavour remained unchanged from 2020 to 2023 (95.1–95.6%); fruit/ice-fruit (60.2–78.1%) and unflavoured (2.0–3.6%) product use rose and mint (24.7–6.8%), sweet/dessert (3.6–2.0%) and tobacco (2.8–0.8%) flavour use declined. Menthol flavour use increased non-linearly (6.7% in 2020, 15.9% in 2021, 8.7% in 2023). Collapsed across years, male, 12th grade, rural and frequent vaping statuses were associated with higher menthol use, and female, eighth and 10th grade, non-frequent vaping and suburban/town statuses were associated with higher fruit/ice-fruit use. Cross-year fruit/ice-fruit use increases were heightened in eighth graders (relative risk (RR) year = 1.13). Youth menthol use declined in cities (RR year =0.87) but increased in rural areas (RR year =1.33). Conclusion During 2020–2023, most US youth vaped non-tobacco flavours. Reducing the availability of: (1) fruit/ice-fruit flavoured e-cigarettes might impact most US youth, especially younger teens and (2) menthol-flavoured e-cigarettes might especially impact youth vulnerable to frequent vaping and rural youth.
Bae et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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