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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2023 Jun 22.
Published in final edited form as: Addict Behav. 2019 Jun 12;99:106014. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.06.003

Table 3.

Smokeless tobacco marketing exposure and smokeless tobacco use/susceptibility.

Ever smokeless tobacco use (n = 3597)a Susceptibility to smokeless tobacco use (n = 3097)b

Adj OR (95% CI) Adj OR (95% CI)
Advertising exposurec
Smokeless tobacco marketing exposure 1.17*** (1.08–1.27) 1.11* (1.02–1.21)
Susceptibility to smokeless tobacco use
No 1.00 (Ref) N/A
Yes 2.89*** (2.05–4.09) N/A
Age 1.16*** (1.08–1.25) 0.91* (0.84–0.99)
Race
Non-Hispanic, Whites 1.00 (Ref) 1.00 (Ref)
Hispanic/Latino 1.26 (0.87–1.82) 1.54* (1.08–2.20)
African American 1.13 (0.61–2.09) 0.94 (0.50–1.75)
Asian ancestry 2.19*** (1.49–3.22) 1.43 (0.95–2.15)
Otherd 1.29 (0.74–2.27) 1.56 (0.91–2.68)
Sex
Male 1.00 (Ref) 1.00 (Ref)
Female 0.77 (0.58–1.03) 0.90 (0.67–1.21)
Institution type
2-year 1.00 (Ref) 1.00 (Ref)
4-year 1.34 (0.69–2.60) 0.99 (0.56–1.79)
Other tobacco usee
No 1.00 (Ref) 1.00 (Ref)
Yes 2.33*** (1.74–3.13) 2.13*** (1.58–2.87)
School-level effect < 0.01 0.01
a

Full sample of eligible participants.

b

Subsample of non-susceptible, never smokeless tobacco users.

c

Cumulative number of channels of self-reported exposure to smokeless tobacco marketing from the following categories: (1) Gas stations, convenience stores, drug stores (such as CVS or Walgreens), or grocery stores; (2) Liquor Stores; (3) Bars/Clubs; (4) Music Events/Festivals; (5) Radio/Internet Radio; (6) Internet/Online; (7) Magazines/Newspapers; (8) Billboards. Possible scores ranged from 0 to 8.

d

Participants that reported race/ethnicity of American Indian/Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, or any other race/ethnicity were categorized as “Other”.

e

Any use of conventional cigarettes, electronic cigarettes, hookah, large cigars, little filtered cigars, or cigarillos in the past 30-days.