Perceptions of African American Youth and Adults Regarding Tobacco Use-Related Factors in Their Community: A Mixed-Methods Approach in Richmond, Virginia.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 FAMILY STUDIES Family & Community Health Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1097/FCH.0000000000000398
Cosima Hoetger, Augustus White, Rose S Bono, Calvin J Hall, Kristina B Hood, Robin S Everhart, Patrick Nana-Sinkam, Andrew J Barnes, Caroline O Cobb
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Abstract

Introduction: The US Food and Drug Administration is poised to restrict the availability of menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars, products disproportionately used by Black/African American (B/AA) individuals. We examined B/AA youth and adult perceptions regarding factors contributing to tobacco use, as well as prevention/cessation resources.

Methods: In 2 mixed-methods studies in Richmond, Virginia, we conducted cross-sectional surveys among youth (n = 201) and adult (n = 212) individuals who were primarily B/AA and reported past 30-day cigar smoking or nontobacco use, followed by focus groups with a subset (youth: n = 30; adults: n = 24). Focus groups were analyzed using a thematic analysis framework, and descriptive survey data provided context to themes.

Results: Among focus group participants, 20% of youth and 75% of adults reported current cigar smoking. Six themes emerged across the groups: advertising/brands, sensory experiences, costs, social factors, youth-related factors, and dependence/cessation. Youth and adults perceived cigars as popular; cigar use was attributed to targeted advertising, flavors, affordability, and accessibility. While adults expressed concern regarding youth tobacco use, youth did not perceive tobacco prevention programs as helpful. Adults and youth reported limited access to community tobacco prevention/cessation programs.

Discussion: Expanded tobacco prevention and cessation resources for B/AA people who smoke could leverage federal regulatory actions to ban tobacco products targeted toward this group and decrease disparities in tobacco-related morbidity and mortality.

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非裔美国青年和成年人对其社区中与烟草使用相关因素的看法:弗吉尼亚州里士满的混合方法。
导言:美国食品和药物管理局准备限制薄荷香烟和调味雪茄的供应,黑人/非洲裔美国人(B/AA)使用这些产品的比例过高。我们研究了黑人/非洲裔美国人青少年和成年人对导致烟草使用的因素以及预防/戒烟资源的看法:在弗吉尼亚州里士满进行的两项混合方法研究中,我们对主要为黑人/非洲裔美国人并报告过去 30 天内吸烟或不吸烟的青少年(n = 201)和成年人(n = 212)进行了横断面调查,随后对部分人群(青少年:n = 30;成年人:n = 24)进行了焦点小组讨论。焦点小组采用主题分析框架进行分析,描述性调查数据为主题提供背景:在焦点小组参与者中,20% 的青少年和 75% 的成年人表示目前正在吸雪茄。各小组出现了六个主题:广告/品牌、感官体验、成本、社会因素、青少年相关因素以及依赖/戒烟。青少年和成年人都认为雪茄很受欢迎;雪茄的使用归因于有针对性的广告、口味、经济实惠和容易获得。成人对青少年吸烟表示担忧,而青少年则认为烟草预防项目没有帮助。成人和青少年都表示社区烟草预防/戒烟项目的机会有限:讨论:为吸烟的黑人/阿拉斯加人扩大烟草预防和戒烟资源可利用联邦监管行动,禁止针对该群体的烟草产品,减少烟草相关发病率和死亡率的差异。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
4.30%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Family & Community Health is a practical quarterly which presents creative, multidisciplinary perspectives and approaches for effective public and community health programs. Each issue focuses on a single timely topic and addresses issues of concern to a wide variety of population groups with diverse ethnic backgrounds, including children and the elderly, men and women, and rural and urban communities.
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