About 37 million children ages 13 to 15 around the world use tobacco, according to a 2024 report from the World Health Organization.
In 2023, e-cigarettes were the most commonly used tobacco product in the U.S., with 7.7% of middle school and high school students reporting e-cigarette use. Cigarettes were the next most common, with 1.6% of middle- and high school students saying they had consumed them in the past month.
Research shows that most people who use tobacco start in childhood.
I am a public health researcher who studies the different ways in which corporations influence adolescent health, with current projects focused on identifying sources of exposure to tobacco marketing among adolescents and young adults.
Over the past decade, I’ve researched ways in which tobacco companies market to children and young adults.
Fourteen-year-olds are particularly vulnerable.
Health harms of tobacco
Smoking is harmful to every organ in the human body and is known to cause many types of cancers and heart disease, among other problems. Nicotine, by itself, in products like e-cigarettes and oral pouches, is harmful to adolescent brain development.
The adolescent brain develops into early adulthood, especially in the prefrontal cortex. This part of the brain is involved in higher cognitive development, including functions pertaining to attention, memory and cognitive flexibility. Research has shown that nicotine exposure results in long-term functional and structural changes in the brain.
Old tactics in new US products
Decades of research have documented how tobacco companies marketed tobacco products for years to attract young customers in order to sustain and grow their businesses.
In a 2021 study, my team and I showed that exposure to e-cigarette marketing with cartoon images decreased high school students’ perceptions of harm from e-cigarettes. Research makes clear that this change in perspective can make adolescents more open to trying e-cigarettes.
In an earlier study, my team and I examined the impact of e-cigarette product placement and imagery in music videos on propensity to use e-cigarettes among young adults. We found that exposure to e-cigarette product placement in music videos increased young adults’ intentions to try e-cigarettes in the future.
Striking at an early age
While our research has largely focused on the U.S. context, several recent studies have shown how tobacco companies continue to market to children in other parts of the world.
For example, a team of researchers conducted focus groups among Chinese adolescents to understand sources of tobacco marketing exposure and what features made ads attractive. They found that adolescents reported being exposed to tobacco ad campaigns near their home and school. These young Chinese people also reported that bright colors, product packaging and price promotions featured in e-cigarette ads and other promotional materials attracted their attention.
In England, a 2022 study provided an overview of marketing claims present on the websites of popular e-cigarette brands. Most notably, the study found that U.K websites featured medicinal claims for smoking cessation, associations with youth culture and depictions of young people using e-cigarettes.
Normalizing tobacco use
The emergence of social media platforms has led tobacco companies to shift their marketing tactics from traditional channels like magazines, billboards and retail stores to online channels, capitalizing on the time that young people spend on screens.
Tobacco companies have helped normalize tobacco use online with the help of branded social media account pages and social media influencers. For example, in 2021, researchers discovered that e-cigarettes were being used and promoted by influencers on Amazon-owned Twitch, a video-sharing platform popular among adolescent gamers.
Similarly, streaming platforms normalize tobacco use. For example, in a 2022 study, my team and I analyzed Netflix original TV shows and films for e-cigarette-related content. Most notably, we documented brief representations of teenagers holding e-cigarettes in the PG-13 film “Hubie Halloween.” Our findings contradict Netflix’s no e-cigarette pledge for PG-13 content.
This suggests a need for further outside-party monitoring of e-cigarettes in Netflix programming.
Most e-cigarettes contain nicotine, and virtually all of them hold dozens of dangerous chemicals.
Spreading awareness
Every country will have to effectively enforce and expand restrictions on cigarette and e-cigarette marketing to protect children and teenagers from messages that encourage them to try smoking and vaping. Additional efforts are needed everywhere to help discourage young people from getting hooked on tobacco.
Most parents, teachers and other authority figures are likely unaware of the extent to which young people are exposed to tobacco content online, including tobacco ads and peer-generated posts on social media that normalize tobacco use.
Campaigns focused on tobacco-related digital media literacy could create awareness about tobacco products and describe how they are being marketed in the digital environment. There are various evidence-based resources that could be built upon to help young people evaluate tobacco advertising messages, empowering digital and social media users to actively evaluate information rather than remain a passive target for the industry’s marketing.
I am certain that increased awareness could prevent young people from consuming tobacco.


Ford and Geely Explore Strategic Manufacturing Partnership in Europe
Prudential Financial Reports Higher Q4 Profit on Strong Underwriting and Investment Gains
Baidu Approves $5 Billion Share Buyback and Plans First-Ever Dividend in 2026
SpaceX Pushes for Early Stock Index Inclusion Ahead of Potential Record-Breaking IPO
Missouri Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Starbucks’ Diversity and Inclusion Policies
Global PC Makers Eye Chinese Memory Chip Suppliers Amid Ongoing Supply Crunch
Instagram Outage Disrupts Thousands of U.S. Users
Tencent Shares Slide After WeChat Restricts YuanBao AI Promotional Links
OpenAI Expands Enterprise AI Strategy With Major Hiring Push Ahead of New Business Offering
Rio Tinto Shares Hit Record High After Ending Glencore Merger Talks
Nasdaq Proposes Fast-Track Rule to Accelerate Index Inclusion for Major New Listings
Nvidia, ByteDance, and the U.S.-China AI Chip Standoff Over H200 Exports
Once Upon a Farm Raises Nearly $198 Million in IPO, Valued at Over $724 Million
SoftBank Shares Slide After Arm Earnings Miss Fuels Tech Stock Sell-Off
TSMC Eyes 3nm Chip Production in Japan with $17 Billion Kumamoto Investment
Alphabet’s Massive AI Spending Surge Signals Confidence in Google’s Growth Engine
Nvidia Nears $20 Billion OpenAI Investment as AI Funding Race Intensifies 



