Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Infodemiology
Date Submitted: Mar 22, 2021
Date Accepted: Nov 20, 2021
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Difficulty in regulating social media content of age-restricted products: Comparing JUUL’s official Twitter timeline versus vaping-related hashtags.
ABSTRACT
Background:
In 2018, JUUL Labs Inc, a popular e-cigarette manufacturer, announced it would substantially limit its social media presence in compliance with the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) call to curb underage e-cigarette use. However, shortly after the announcement, a series of JUUL-related hashtags emerged on various social media platforms, calling the effectiveness of the FDA’s regulations into question.
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to show that hashtags remain a common venue to market age-restricted products on social media.
Methods:
We used Twitter’s standard Application Programming Interface (API) to download the 3200 most-recent tweets originating from JUUL Labs Inc.’s official Twitter Account (@JUULVapor), and a series of tweets containing one, or more, of the following hashtags (#ecig, #vape, #JUUL). We ran two Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) topic models comparing @JUULVapor’s content versus our hashtag corpus. We qualitatively deliberated topic meanings and substantiated our interpretations with tweets from either corpus.
Results:
The topic model generated for @JUULVapor’s timeline seemingly alluded to compliance with the FDA’s call to prohibit marketing of age-restricted products on social media. However, the topic model generated for the hashtag corpus contained several references to flavors, vaping paraphernalia, and illicit drugs which may be appealing to younger audiences.
Conclusions:
Our findings underscore the complicated nature of social media regulation. Although JUUL Labs Inc. seemingly complied with the FDA to limit its social media presence, JUUL and other e-cigarette manufacturers are still discussed openly in social media spaces. Much discourse about JUUL and e-cigarettes is spread via hashtags, which allow messages to reach a wide audience quickly. This suggests social media regulations on manufacturers are, by themselves, in effective. Stricter protocols are needed to regulate discourse about age-restricted products on social media.
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