E-cigarettes in college: Associations between mental health and e-cigarette use with other substances.

IF 1.9 Q3 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Tobacco Prevention & Cessation Pub Date : 2024-05-31 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.18332/tpc/188712
Christine M Kava, Shannon L Watkins, Paul A Gilbert, Tanya J Villhauer, Trisha L Welter, Rima A Afifi
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Abstract

Introduction: College students are a priority population for substance use prevention, and other studies have reported associations between mental health and e-cigarette use. This study described the association of mental health to e-cigarette and other substance use (ECIG+ use) among US college students.

Methods: We used Fall 2018 and Spring 2019 National College Health Assessment data among undergraduate students aged 18-24 years (n=55654) at 138 institutions. We characterized substance use patterns and used multinomial regression to model adjusted odds of past 30-day ECIG use type [no substance use (reference); sole e-cigarette use; e-cigarette use and other substance use (ECIG+ use); no e-cigarette use but other substance use] by mental health characteristics, past 12-month diagnosis/treatment and psychological distress, individual characteristics, and college characteristics.

Results: Alcohol was the most prevalent substance (58%) used, followed by cannabis (23%) and e-cigarettes (15%). Nearly all (95%) students who used e-cigarettes reported using another substance. Adjusted odds of ECIG+ use (vs no substance use) were higher among students with past 12-month mental health diagnosis/treatment (AOR=1.5; 95% CI: 1.4-1.6) and higher psychological distress (AOR=1.1; 95% CI: 1.1-1.2). Other characteristics significantly associated with ECIG+ use included gender identity, sexual orientation, race and ethnicity, self-rated health, year in school, cumulative grade average, fraternity/sorority membership, and current residence.

Conclusions: Most students who used e-cigarettes also reported other substance use, and this pattern of use was associated with poorer mental health outcomes than no substance use. Clarifying the relationship between mental health and ECIG+ use may enhance health interventions for college students.

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大学里的电子烟:心理健康与使用电子烟和其他物质之间的关联。
引言大学生是预防药物使用的重点人群,其他研究报告了心理健康与电子烟使用之间的关系。本研究描述了美国大学生的心理健康与电子烟和其他物质使用(ECIG+使用)之间的关联:我们使用了 138 所院校 18-24 岁本科生(n=55654)的 2018 年秋季和 2019 年春季全国大学生健康评估数据。我们描述了物质使用模式,并使用多项式回归建立了过去30天ECIG使用类型[无物质使用(参考);仅使用电子烟;电子烟使用和其他物质使用(ECIG+使用);无电子烟使用但使用其他物质]的调整几率模型,该模型由心理健康特征、过去12个月的诊断/治疗和心理困扰、个人特征和院校特征组成:使用最多的物质是酒精(58%),其次是大麻(23%)和电子烟(15%)。几乎所有(95%)使用电子烟的学生都报告说使用过其他物质。在过去12个月中曾接受过心理健康诊断/治疗(AOR=1.5;95% CI:1.4-1.6)和心理压力较大(AOR=1.1;95% CI:1.1-1.2)的学生中,使用ECIG+(与不使用药物相比)的调整后几率更高。与使用ECIG+明显相关的其他特征包括性别认同、性取向、种族和民族、自评健康状况、在校年级、累积平均成绩、兄弟会/联谊会成员身份和当前居住地:大多数使用电子烟的学生还报告了使用其他药物的情况,与不使用药物相比,这种使用模式与较差的心理健康结果有关。厘清心理健康与使用电子烟+之间的关系可加强对大学生的健康干预。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
155
审稿时长
4 weeks
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