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Sherri Katz Research

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Meet a Student

Meet a Student

optimize your learning experience here. Nothing can come close to the enthusiasm of the HSJMC faculty.

What is one aspect of your major that surprised you?

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One thing that surprised me is that I get to meet and collaborate with so many different types of creatives. I was amazed at the wide-ranging specialties and skillsets that students within my major have possessed. I have met some talented graphic designers, photographers, reporters, copywriters, digital geeks, podcasters, or even social media influencers. Everyone all brings something different to the table and it’s what makes the program so unique. Dabbling in different areas of expertise is a good practice for the future too if you’re going into a creative field.

What do you wish you had known about your career path before now?

That it will not be black and white, and it doesn’t have to be. I didn’t know I would pursue a career in advertising when I first came into the U. I didn’t know I would be interested in consumer behaviors. I didn’t know I could be so invested in the digital side of advertising. But here I am, slowly figuring myself out, and it’s perfectly fine.

TAMPING DOWN YOUTH VAPING

Assistant Professor Sherri Jean Katz is researching how youth perceive the dangers of vaping.

BY LAUREN BORCHART

MORE THAN FIVE MILLION YOUTH

REPORTED using e-cigarettes in 2019, and nearly one million of those youths reported using e-cigarettes daily, according to the Youth Tobacco Survey conducted by the FDA and CDC.

“This was the generation that was supposed to end nicotine addiction,” said Assistant Professor Sherri Jean Katz. Katz researches youth and vaping from a health communication perspective. She focuses on how vaping messages and prevention messages influence how youth perceive vaping risks and how this influences their choices.

READING RISK FACTORS “There’s been 70 years of data on the health risks associated with cigarettes and quite a bit of research

on how people think about the risks associated with cigarettes. But we don’t have that history of research on e-cigarettes,” said Katz. This lack of information can be challenging, as it is difficult to communicate health risks when they are not fully known at this point. Recognizing a need for more information on risk perceptions of vaping, Katz took on the challenge herself.

Katz first began researching tobacco regulatory science while pursuing her Ph.D. and postdoctoral in communication at Cornell University. At the time, vape products were mostly marketed toward adults looking to quit cigarette smoking. Since then, she has witnessed the increase in the use of vaping devices among youth, especially with the rise in popularity of the brand JUUL.

“We’ve seen a big change here on the University of Minnesota campus in the past few years. I conducted a series of focus groups in spring 2017, and then we did focus groups [in] spring 2019, and there is a huge change in usage patterns.”

Her research initially focused on use among college and high school students, but she has recently received a grant from the National Institutes of Health to collect data from middle school students on how they perceive messages about vaping. To do this, Katz shows middle school students photos of vaping products, like they might see in a store, with different packaging elements, such as modified risk statements and flavors (e.g. tobacco vs. candy). She then collects data on risk perceptions and connects that to which category of statement and flavors the students viewed.

In a past study with college students, Katz found that vape products with a tobacco flavor are associated with higher risk perceptions than vape products without flavors. In another study, college students reported that candy and fruit flavors make tobacco products seem less risky, whereas tobacco flavor reminds them of cigarettes.

Katz believes the most effective way to make youth consider the risks involved with vaping is by encouraging them to think twice about what the packaging is telling them. “Based on my research with high school students, when they think deeply and really think critically about the messages they were seeing, those high school students are able to have higher risk perceptions and then lower intentions to use e-cigarettes,” she said.

“I definitely think that from a messaging perspective, what you show them versus how they perceive it becomes a very important story,” she added. GATEWAY TO CIGARETTES Before the introduction of vaping, Gen Z (people born between 1995–2015) was viewed as the generation that would end smoking. “There was a call that this generation was going to end nicotine addiction. This was no longer going to be a thing; cigarette smoking rates had gone down, remarkably, and that was where we were heading.”

Unfortunately, Katz sees a distinct relationship between people who currently vape and the likelihood that they will become addicted to nicotine and use cigarettes in the future. “We have a real increase in the potential for true nicotine addiction among youth and young adults.”

She sees the culture around vaping to be one of the reasons it is a growing issue. She explained that while everyday vaping is sometimes stigmatized, social vaping is not, and social vaping leads to everyday vaping for many. “There’s this culture where it’s okay to do it socially, but you wouldn’t want to be seen doing it alone or on your own time.” To combat the normalization of social use, Katz said, “it could be helpful to make that connection, so that people connect that social use to everyday use.”

To Katz, one way to tackle this issue is to research the per

Before the introduction of vaping, Gen Z (people born between 1995–2015) was viewed as the generation that would end smoking.

ceptions that people have about vaping. “Recognize that this problem (nicotine addiction) that we thought was going to be solved is actually now a huge challenge in our modern society. It’s important not to dismiss it.”

RESEARCH WITH IMPACT Katz is taking her research to policymakers who can use her studies to make a difference as they develop vaping policy. “I’ve had the chance to speak directly with legislators and some policy folks. I think that this is an amazing opportunity to have an impact and allow my work to not just live in scholarly journals.”

She hopes that her research can mitigate the youth vaping problem. “I’d like to see a change in the statistics regarding teen and young adult use.”

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