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Oral Nicotine Gum Discussions on Twitter: Content Analysis.

Authors :
Galimov, Artur
Kirkpatrick, Matthew G
Vassey, Julia
Galstyan, Ellen
Smith, Ashley
Allem, Jon-Patrick
Unger, Jennifer B
Source :
Nicotine & Tobacco Research. Apr2024, Vol. 26 Issue 4, p503-507. 5p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background Oral nicotine gum such as LUCY, which comes in colorful packaging, mimicking traditional chewing gum, is becoming popular. Many brands of gum have not been approved by the FDA for smoking cessation. This study examined public discourse about, including sentiment toward, oral nicotine gum on Twitter. Methods We used Twitter's Streaming Application Programming Interface to collect data from January 1, 2021, to December 21, 2021, using "nicotine gum" and/or "#nicotinegum" search terms (N  = 19 171 unique tweets were collected). We used an inductive approach to become familiar with the data, generated a codebook, and conducted a content analysis on (n  = 2152) tweets. Results Cessation (n  = 716, 33.3%), personal experience (n  = 370, 17.2%), and addiction to gum (n  = 135, 6.3%) were the most prevalent themes. Cessation tweets primarily discussed cigarette smoking cessation (n  = 418, 58.4% of cessation tweets) and successful cessation experiences (n  = 155, 21.6%). Other identified themes pertained to using nicotine gum for cognitive enhancement or catching a "buzz" (n  = 102, 4.7%), marketing (n  = 98, 4.6%), using nicotine gum with other substances (n  = 90, 4.2%), and adverse effects (n  = 63, 2.9%). Sentiment analysis results revealed that 675 (44.2%) tweets were categorized as neutral, 605 (39.6%) tweets were classified as positive, and 248 tweets (16.2%) were negative. Conclusions About one-third of tweets in our corpus mentioned nicotine gum in the context of smoking cessation. Most nicotine gum-related posts conveyed positive and neutral sentiments. Future studies should consider adding novel nicotine gum-specific search terms as well as exploring other social media platforms to gain more insights about these products. Implications Our findings suggest that Twitter has the potential to track and facilitate conversations between those seeking cigarette cessation advice and those who have successfully quit tobacco by using nicotine gum. Monitoring of promotional content from nicotine gum companies is needed to ensure these products are not appealing to youth and nonusers of tobacco. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14622203
Volume :
26
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Nicotine & Tobacco Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176218596
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntad190