Elsevier

Preventive Medicine Reports

Volume 19, September 2020, 101137
Preventive Medicine Reports

Vape shop identification, density and place characteristics in six metropolitan areas across the US

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101137Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Vaping product retailers are prominent across metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs).

  • Despite both being major channels for obtaining vaping products, convenience stores greatly outnumber vape shops.

  • These common retail sources of vaping products differentially locate in relation to neighborhood sociodemographics across MSAs.

  • In some MSAs, vape shops and convenience stores may target youth and lower income populations.

Abstract

Vaping is increasingly prevalent and controversial. Vape shops and convenience stores are common but distinct sources of vaping products, and where they locate may reflect likely target markets. This study examined the density and neighborhood demographics of vape shops and convenience stores in six metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs): Atlanta, Boston, Minneapolis, Oklahoma City, San Diego, Seattle. We identified 459 vape shops using Yelp and Google application programming interfaces and 10,777 convenience stores using ReferenceUSA and Dun & Bradstreet. Retailers were geocoded to census tracts (n = 4,442), and logistic regressions were conducted using as predictors percent non-White, percent youth (5–17 years or 5–20 years), and median household income from the American Community Survey, 2013–2017. Per 10,000 young adults, vape shop density ranged from 0.6 (Boston, San Diego) to 1.7 (Oklahoma City), and convenience store density ranged from 12.6 (San Diego) to 26.3 (Oklahoma City). Logistic regressions indicated that vape shops more likely resided in tracts with lower percentages of youth in Boston, but higher percentages of youth in Atlanta, as well as with lower incomes in Boston and Seattle. Convenience stores more likely resided in tracts with lower percentages of non-Whites in Atlanta and Boston; lower incomes in Atlanta, Boston, San Diego, and Seattle; and higher percentages of youth in Atlanta, Boston, and Minneapolis. These common retail sources of vaping products differentially locate in relation to neighborhood sociodemographics across MSAs. Findings suggest that, in some MSAs, vape shops and convenience stores may target youth and lower income populations.

Abbreviations

MSA
metropolitan statistical area
FDA
Food and Drug Administration
VAPES
Vape shop Advertising, Place characteristics and Effects Surveillance

Keywords

Tobacco control
Policy
Alternative tobacco products
E-cigarettes
Retail marketing
Vaping

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