Medical Trainees’ Knowledge and Attitudes Towards Electronic Cigarettes and Hookah: A Multinational Survey Study
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rising prevalence of electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) and hookah use among youth raises questions about medical trainees’ views of these products. We aimed to investigate medical trainees’ knowledge and attitudes toward e-cigarette and hookah use.
METHODS: We used data from a large cross-sectional survey of medical trainees in Brazil, the United States, and India. We investigated demographic and mental health aspects, history of e-cigarettes and tobacco use, knowledge and attitudes toward e-cigarettes and hookah, and sources of information on e-cigarettes and hookah. Although all medical trainees were eligible for the original study, only senior students and physicians-in-training were included in the present analysis.
RESULTS: Of 2,036 senior students and physicians-in-training, 27.4% believed e-cigarette use to be less harmful than tobacco smoking. As for hookah use, 14.9% believed it posed a lower risk than cigarettes. More than a third of trainees did not acknowledge the risks of passive e-cigarette use (42.9%) or hookah smoking (35.1%). Also, 32.4% endorsed e-cigarettes to quit smoking, whereas 22.5% felt ill equipped to discuss these tobacco products with patients. Fewer than half recalled attending lectures on these topics, and their most common sources of information were social media (54.5%), Google (40.8%), and friends and relatives (40.3%).
CONCLUSIONS: Medical trainees often reported incorrect or biased perceptions of e-cigarettes and hookah, resorted to unreliable sources of information, and lacked the confidence to discuss the topic with patients. An expanded curriculum emphasis on e-cigarette and hookah use might be necessary because failing to address these educational gaps could risk years of efforts against smoking normalization.
- medical education
- smoking
- tobacco
- e-cigarettes
- electronic cigarettes
- e-cigarette use
- vaping
- narghile
- hookah
- physician
- medical student
Footnotes
- Correspondence: Fernando P Bruno MD MPH, Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine, 60 Prospect Ave, Room 205, Middletown, NY 10490. E-mail: fernando.bruno{at}touro.edu
Dr Degani-Costa presented a poster version with some of these findings at the European Respiratory Congress 2022, held September 2022, in Barcelona, Spain, and at the 40th Brazilian Congress of Pulmonology and Tisiology, held October 2022, in São Paulo, Brazil; and Dr Tehrani presented a poster version with some of these findings at the American College of Physicians Scientific Meeting Poster Competition – California Chapter, held October 2022, in Stanford, California.
The authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
Supplementary material related to this paper is available at http://www.rcjournal.com.
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