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RecruitingNCT06142877

Effects of Social Media Use on Young Adults' E-Cigarette Use

Identifying and Addressing the Effects of Social Media Use on Young Adults' E-Cigarette Use: A Solutions-Oriented Approach

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Oklahoma · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 25 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effects of social media use on e-cigarette use in young adults who use e-cigarettes. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does reducing social media use change young adults' e-cigarette use? * Does reducing social media use change things such as young adults' mental health and what they see on social media? Participants will complete surveys and submit screenshots showing how much time they spend on social media. Researchers will compare young adults who reduce their social media use to young adults who use social media as usual, to see if their e-cigarette use differs.

Detailed description

The overall goals of this project are to understand how young adults' social media use affects their nicotine vaping and to identify intervention targets that mitigate social media's impact on vaping. Prevalence of vaping and social media use among young adults have increased in tandem. Exposure to vaping-related social media content is common and is associated with vaping. Intense social media use appears to contribute to young adults' increased mental health symptoms, which are linked to tobacco product use. This project aims to contribute to scientific understanding of the causal links between social media use and vaping in young adulthood. Young adults with past-month vaping will report time spent on social media, vaping-related social media content exposure, social comparison on social media, mental health, and vaping behavior. After a 1-month baseline measurement period, they will be randomized to reduce their social media use (incentivized) or use social media as usual for a 3-month experimental period. Longitudinal within- and between-subjects analyses will test relationships between time spent on social media, risk factors for vaping, and vaping behavior. Specific research aims are to: (1) investigate the relationships between a reduction in social media use and: a) vaping content exposure, b) social comparison, and c) mental health, and (2) examine whether reducing social media use reduces past-month vaping days, vaping episodes per vaping day, and puffs per vaping episode.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSocial Media Use ReductionParticipants will be incentivized to reduce their social media use by a pre-specified percentage from baseline.

Timeline

Start date
2023-12-04
Primary completion
2025-02-01
Completion
2025-03-01
First posted
2023-11-22
Last updated
2024-05-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06142877. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.