<p>Television advertisements for e-cigarettes may be enticing current and even former tobacco smokers to reach for another cigarette, new research reveals.<br /><br /></p>.<p>People who smoke tobacco cigarettes daily and who watched e-cigarette advertisements with someone inhaling (or vaping) or holding an e-cigarette showed a greater urge to smoke than regular smokers who did not see the vaping.<br /><br />After watching e-cigarette advertisements with vaping, former smokers feel less confident that they could refrain from smoking tobacco cigarettes than former smokers seeing e-cigarette ads without vaping.<br />"We know that exposure to smoking cues such as visual depictions of cigarettes, ashtrays, matches, lighters and smoke heightens smokers' urge to smoke a cigarette, and decreases former smokers' confidence in their ability to refrain from smoking a cigarette," said Erin K. Maloney from the University of Pennsylvania.<br /><br />The researchers studied more than 800 daily, intermittent, and former smokers who watched e-cigarette advertising, and who then took a survey to determine smoking urges, intentions and behaviours.<br /><br />Over 35 percent of the daily smokers who were showed vaping reported having a tobacco cigarette during the study against 22 percent of daily smokers who saw ads without vaping, and about 23 percent of daily smokers who did not see any advertising.<br /><br />"These findings are especially relevant to ongoing health and policy discussions, as they indicate that it is not just the health impact of e-cigarettes and vaping themselves that must be considered," co-author Teresa Thompson from University of Dayton said.<br />The study appeared in the journal Health Communication.<br /></p>
<p>Television advertisements for e-cigarettes may be enticing current and even former tobacco smokers to reach for another cigarette, new research reveals.<br /><br /></p>.<p>People who smoke tobacco cigarettes daily and who watched e-cigarette advertisements with someone inhaling (or vaping) or holding an e-cigarette showed a greater urge to smoke than regular smokers who did not see the vaping.<br /><br />After watching e-cigarette advertisements with vaping, former smokers feel less confident that they could refrain from smoking tobacco cigarettes than former smokers seeing e-cigarette ads without vaping.<br />"We know that exposure to smoking cues such as visual depictions of cigarettes, ashtrays, matches, lighters and smoke heightens smokers' urge to smoke a cigarette, and decreases former smokers' confidence in their ability to refrain from smoking a cigarette," said Erin K. Maloney from the University of Pennsylvania.<br /><br />The researchers studied more than 800 daily, intermittent, and former smokers who watched e-cigarette advertising, and who then took a survey to determine smoking urges, intentions and behaviours.<br /><br />Over 35 percent of the daily smokers who were showed vaping reported having a tobacco cigarette during the study against 22 percent of daily smokers who saw ads without vaping, and about 23 percent of daily smokers who did not see any advertising.<br /><br />"These findings are especially relevant to ongoing health and policy discussions, as they indicate that it is not just the health impact of e-cigarettes and vaping themselves that must be considered," co-author Teresa Thompson from University of Dayton said.<br />The study appeared in the journal Health Communication.<br /></p>