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Puff Bars, Tobacco Policy Evasion, and Nicotine Dependence: Content Analysis of Tweets
Research indicates that users of JUUL’s higher nicotine level products (ie, 5%) experience symptoms of dependence and acute nicotine effects [14]. Likewise, nicotine dependence in past-month adolescent e-cigarette users is significantly associated with increased nicotine concentrations [15]. Thus, despite the intended goal of reducing youth tobacco use through legislative and policy activities, unintended loopholes allowed youth to access the same products, just in a different form.
J Med Internet Res 2022;24(3):e27894
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Impact of Removing Nonprescription Codeine in Australia: Protocol for a Prospective Cohort Study
Participants who self-reported that they were in current treatment for codeine dependence were excluded from the study as changes in their codeine use as a result of treatment rather than policy change may confound the interpretability of the study results.
Measures used in this study covered a range of domains including demographic information, health service use, pain and coping, physical and mental health, and codeine use and codeine dependence.
JMIR Res Protoc 2020;9(3):e15540
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