# Exposure to e-Cigarette Posts Across Social Media Platforms and Its Associations With Susceptibility and e-Cigarette Use: Comparative Cross-Sectional Study of High Schoolers in Jalisco (Mexico) and Southern California (United States)

**Authors:** Dèsirée Vidaña-Perez, Inti Barrientos-Gutierrez, Rosibel Rodríguez-Bolaños, Evangelina Díaz-Andrade, Diego F Leal, Minji Kim, Jennifer B Unger, Thomas W Valente, Jessica L Barrington-Trimis, James F Thrasher

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/85376 · 2026-03-13

## TL;DR

This study compares how exposure to e-cigarette content on social media affects high schoolers' likelihood to use e-cigarettes in Mexico and the U.S.

## Contribution

The study provides a cross-national comparison of social media exposure to e-cigarette content and its impact on adolescent behavior in different regulatory environments.

## Key findings

- E-cigarette use was significantly higher in Jalisco (Mexico) compared to Southern California (U.S.).
- In both regions, higher social media use and exposure to e-cigarette content were linked to increased susceptibility and use.
- The association between social media exposure and e-cigarette use varied by region and platform frequency.

## Abstract

Adolescents’ exposure to electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) content through social media platforms influences their perceptions and behaviors, although cross-country analyses in different regulatory environments are scarce.

This study evaluated the association between e-cigarette exposure on social media platforms and e-cigarette susceptibility and use in Jalisco (Mexico) and Southern California (United States).

In 2022-2023, students from 23 high schools in Jalisco (n=1418) and 11 in Southern California (n=2953) were surveyed with harmonized measures on past-month frequency of social media platform use (ie, YouTube [Google], Instagram [Meta], TikTok [ByteDance], Snapchat [Snap Inc], WhatsApp [Meta], Facebook [Meta], Twitter (now “X”), and Twitch [Twitch Interactive]) and seeing e-cigarette posts on each social media platform used; which were recoded to 5-point scores (range 0-4) for social media platforms use and e-cigarette post exposure. Country-stratified logistic models regressed e-cigarette susceptibility (among noncurrent users) and past-month use on social media platform scores, adjusting for age, sex, family affluence, and friends’ e-cigarette use.

Past-month e-cigarette use was higher in Jalisco (248/1418, 17.5%) than Southern California (139/2953, 4.7%; P<.001). Social media use and e-cigarette exposure on each social media platform differed across samples (P values<.001). In Southern California, more frequent social media use was positively associated with e-cigarette susceptibility (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 1.83, 95% CI 1.48-2.25), whereas in Jalisco, higher frequency of exposure to e-cigarette content was associated with susceptibility (AOR 1.21, 95% CI 1.02-1.43). Higher frequency of social media use and exposure to e-cigarette content were both positively associated with past-month e-cigarette use in Southern California; in Jalisco, greater exposure to social media platforms and e-cigarette content was associated with past-month use.

Frequent social media platform use and e-cigarette exposure through social media platforms appear to be associated with e-cigarette susceptibility and use across contexts. Stronger policies to limit and enforce online exposures are needed.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** REDCap (MESH:D014947), substance use (MESH:D019966), Cancer (MESH:D009369), ADVANCE (MESH:D020178)
- **Chemicals:** Nicotine (MESH:D009538), Alcohol (MESH:D000438), e- (MESH:D004540), menthol (MESH:D008610)
- **Species:** Nicotiana tabacum (American tobacco, species) [taxon 4097], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13032094/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13032094