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Olusegun Owotomo

Researcher at University of Texas at Austin

Publications -  10
Citations -  114

Olusegun Owotomo is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Nicotine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 8 publications receiving 67 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptions of the Harm and Addictiveness of Conventional Cigarette Smoking Among Adolescent E-Cigarette Users

TL;DR: E-cigarette users' attitudes and perceptions regarding conventional cigarette smoking may leave them vulnerable to becoming conventional cigarette smokers, and future studies should explore the prospective relationship between smoking-related perceptions of conventional cigarette cigarette smoking among e-cigarettes users and the onset of cigarette smoking.
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Adolescent Risk Behavior: Differentiating Reasoned And Reactive Risk-taking.

TL;DR: The results support the distinction between reasoned and reactive risk behavior as meaningful subtypes of adolescent risk behavior and challenge prevailing frameworks that attribute adolescentrisk behavior primarily to poor response inhibition.
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Smoking Intention and Progression From E-Cigarette Use to Cigarette Smoking

TL;DR: E-cigarette use is associated with increased odds of cigarette smoking among adolescents who had no previous smoking intention, and may create intention to smoke and/or nicotine use disorder that lead to onset ofcigarette smoking.
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The youth e-cigarette epidemic: updates and review of devices, epidemiology and regulation.

TL;DR: The current e-cigarette landscape is dominated by discrete and stylish pod-based e-cigarettes with varying capacity for customized nicotine delivery, vapor concealment, and child-appealing e-liquid flavors as discussed by the authors .
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Socioeconomic well-being in early adulthood among repeat versus one-time teenage mothers.

TL;DR: This data indicates that among mothers who bear multiple children, the odds of having a second child after the first is more likely to be higher than the other two.