A significant research project by Eastern Institute of Technology addressing the youth vaping epidemic has expanded beyond its initial Hawke’s Bay focus.
Following a request from a Bay of Plenty secondary school, the project, titled ‘Vaping Landscape,’ will now include Pāpāmoa College in its study.
The extension complements an existing study, ‘Scoping Solutions to Address the Epidemic of Youth Vaping in Aotearoa,’ led by Associate Professor Anita Jagroop-Dearing.
This new study will be carried out by EIT Master of Health Science student Melody Khan, who has been actively involved in the original research.
The 'Vaping Landscape' study has been made possible by an additional grant from the Health Research Foundation Hawke’s Bay, supplementing the original funding from the Health Research Council and EIT.
Both studies aim to explore the personal experiences and health awareness related to e-cigarette use among youth, and to compare regional differences in vaping behaviours.
“This will be the first comprehensive investigation comparing vaping among intermediate and high school students in two distinct regions of New Zealand,” says Anita, highlighting the study’s scope.
“We are collaborating with several schools across Hawke’s Bay, and with additional funding, we have extended the research to include schools outside this region.”
Pāpāmoa College, with over 1,700 students—28 per cent of whom are Māori and six per cent Pasifika—approached EIT with concerns about rising vaping incidents.
After evaluating the feasibility and obtaining necessary ethics approvals, the college was incorporated into the study to provide comparative data.
“Previous data suggested higher vaping rates among Māori and Pacific students compared to their non-Māori and non-Pacific peers,” says Anita.
“Our goal is to analyse vaping behaviours at Pāpāmoa College and compare them with those observed in Hawke’s Bay.”
Melody Khan, a Master of Health Science student at EIT, transitioned from her original focus on nutrition to address the emerging issue of youth vaping.
“Although my initial thesis was on nutrition and labelling, this pressing issue of youth vaping motivated me to pivot my research. It’s an area needing further exploration,” says Melody.
Pāpāmoa College Deputy Principal Ben Ormsby welcomes the opportunity to participate.
“Given the rise in vaping incidents at our school, we saw this as a chance to contribute to research and potentially find effective strategies for education and intervention. The feedback from our community has been very supportive,” says Ben.
The college community is optimistic about the study’s potential impact.
“We hope that our involvement will contribute to meaningful solutions to address youth vaping,” says Ben.
“If the research helps develop effective strategies or messaging, it will be well worth our participation.”
The expanded study is set to provide valuable insights into vaping behaviours and help shape future interventions to tackle this growing issue among New Zealand’s youth.
6 comments
The Answer Is............
Posted on 14-07-2024 10:14 | By Thats Nice
Don't allow your kids to vape, parents and teachers. You have the responsibility to ensure that children aren't doing wrong, or have you lost all control? It's called bad behavior. Are these kids also permitted to eat copious amounts of lollies, cakes, chips, take drugs, drink alcohol and speed in fast cars (a proven killer) on a daily basis and btw where and how are these kids obtaining the vape devices in the first place? I would like to know what these "incidents" actually are as well please. Start dishing out some discipline for goodness's sake.
Who supplies them vape?
Posted on 14-07-2024 10:18 | By Pundit
It seems to me that all the studies that are taxpayer funded to find effective strategies for education and intervention for vaping youth miss the obvious. It is illegal to sell vapes to those under the age of 18. So, if as they say thousands of school children are vaping everyday would it not be a good idea to find out where they get their vape from? If it's a shop or an online company, then shut them down. If its friends and family then maybe there needs to be laws in place to stop that. Cut the supply to the kids seems like a logical action to take instead of pandering to children with messaging. I would be interested to understand how tens of thousands of vape devices get into the hands of children every year.
Just ban it.
Posted on 14-07-2024 12:55 | By morepork
Make the importation of vape and vape paraphenalia illegal. Close down the industry and prevent overseas payments to the actual suppliers. We should never have allowed it into the country. We should beef up the addiction services we already have and provide support for addicts (adults and children). Address addiction and stop replacing one addiction with another one.
@Pundit
Posted on 14-07-2024 13:00 | By morepork
Hear! Hear! I stated my position in a separate post here, but I don't think there is any realistic chance of getting what I described. Given that, I think your post asks a very pertinent question and it SHOULD be followed up.
The Master
Posted on 14-07-2024 14:12 | By Ian Stevenson
Vaping is as bad if not worse than Cigs...
Tax it out of existence!!!
@ The Master
Posted on 15-07-2024 06:28 | By Thats Nice
Cigarettes contain far more chemicals than vape juice so definitely not worse. Tax vapes out of existence and people that are currently using vapes may very well go back to cigarette smoking.
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