Effect of E-cigarette Use and Social Network on Smoking Behavior Change: An agent-based model of E-cigarette and Cigarette Interaction
Yang Qin, Rojiemiahd Edjoc, Nathaniel D Osgood

TL;DR
This study uses an agent-based model to explore how electronic cigarette use and social networks influence smoking behavior change, highlighting potential for reducing smoking prevalence and relapse risk.
Contribution
It introduces a novel agent-based model to analyze the complex interactions between ECig use, social networks, and smoking behavior change.
Findings
ECig use reduces current smoker prevalence
Social networks increase ECig user prevalence
Understanding drivers of cessation and relapse is crucial
Abstract
Despite a general reduction in smoking in many areas of the developed world, it remains one of the biggest public health threats. As an alternative to tobacco, the use of electronic cigarettes (ECig) has been increased dramatically over the last decade. ECig use is hypothesized to impact smoking behavior through several pathways, not only as a means of quitting cigarettes and lowering risk of relapse, but also as both an alternative nicotine delivery device to cigarettes, as a visible use of nicotine that can lead to imitative behavior in the form of smoking, and as a gateway nicotine delivery technology that can build high levels of nicotine tolerance and pave the way for initiation of smoking. Evidence regarding the effect of ECig use on smoking behavior change remains inconclusive. To address these challenges, we built an agent-based model (ABM) of smoking and ECig use to examine the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Behavioral Health and Interventions · Mental Health Research Topics
