Initial Development of an E-cigarette Purchase Task: A Mixed Methods Study

Tob Regul Sci. 2017 Apr;3(2):139-150. doi: 10.18001/TRS.3.2.2.

Abstract

Objectives: Behavioral economic purchase tasks, which estimate demand for drugs, have been successfully developed for cigarettes and are widely used. However, a validated purchase task does not yet exist for e-cigarettes. The aim of this project was to identify the relevant units for an e-cigarette purchase task (E-CPT).

Methods: Focus groups (N=28 participants in 7 groups, 2-7 participants per group) consisting of current e-cigarette users were conducted. Participants discussed their daily use patterns, completed a preliminary E-CPT which asked how many puffs of their e-cigarette they would consume per day at escalating prices, and discussed the extent to which the task accurately reflected their real-world behavior. Groups were recorded and transcribed; analysis focused on statements related to daily consumption and the E-CPT.

Results: Participants were unlikely to quantify their daily use in terms of puffs, and perceptions about the appropriate unit for an E-CPT varied across device type. Users of first-generation devices (eg, cigalikes) reported that the relevant unit was the individual device/cartridge; however, participants who purchased nicotine liquid for their device emphasized that e-liquid volume in milliliters would better reflect their use.

Conclusions: Multiple versions of the E-CPT may be necessary to provide valid measures of e-cigarette demand.

Keywords: behavioral economics; e-cigarettes; purchase task; vaping.