Kids and young adults who use social media for seven or more hours per day have double the risk of taking up vaping or smoking or both, new research shows. The study is based on a survey of almost ...
The likelihood of smoking, vaping, and dual-use also rose in tandem with the amount of time spent on social media. Those who said they spent less than 1 hour/day on social media were 92% more ...
The existing body of research on social media use and smoking and vaping mostly concerns the U.S., so to better assess the situation in the UK, the researchers drew on data from 10 to 25-year-olds ...
A new study shows that children who spend time on social media are more likely to vape and smoke cigarettes than their peers. Analyzing data from 10,808 people aged 10 to 25 in the UK, a research ...
Youngsters who spend a lot of time on social media are more likely to vape and smoke cigarettes, research suggests. A recent study has revealed just another bad impact social media is having on ...
TikTok is full of fun memes, pranks, dances and challenges -- and illicit vaping product sales targeting teenagers, a new study reports. Advertising and sales of vaping products is common on the ...
Lily Ford started vaping at 18-years-old. The disposable devices had been circulating at parties and she decided to try it.
The likelihood of smoking, vaping, and dual use also rose in tandem with the amount of time spent on social media. Those who said they spent less than 1 hour/day on social media were 92% more ...
The more time spent on social media, the greater the likelihood that children and young people will both smoke and/or vape, suggests research published online in the respiratory journal Thorax.