Goldstein, Ranney find daily emails about chemicals in tobacco lead some smokers to consider quitting March 12, 2021 Family Medicine researchers Adam Goldstein and Leah Ranney recently published their findings in JAMA Network Open.
Family Medicine researchers receive new funding to develop first-of-its-kind health messaging on co-use of alcohol and tobacco products September 22, 2020 A team of researchers from the ºÚÁÏÍø Department of Family Medicine and Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center have received new funding to develop and test messaging to co-users of alcohol and tobacco products on the risk of associated cancers.
E-cigarette flavors decrease perception of harm among youth October 25, 2019 Led by ºÚÁÏÍø Family Medicine and ºÚÁÏÍø Lineberger researchers, a systematic review of scientific literature revealed the role flavored e-cigarettes have on product preference, appeal, harm perceptions, willingness to use, and initiation among youth.
Do high e-cigarette taxes drive Indonesian vapers to smoke conventional cigarettes? February 8, 2019 Justin Byron, PhD, MHS is the principal investigator on a grant from the Bloomberg Foundation and the Johns Hopkins Institute for Global Tobacco Control to examine whether a new 57% tax on e-cigarette liquids in Indonesia is driving vapers back to deadly conventional cigarettes.