天真和吸烟青少年电子烟和大麻共同使用的社会人口学相关性。

Journal of prevention (2022) Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-04-11 DOI:10.1007/s10935-023-00729-z
Cristina B Bares, Vinita Sharma, Catalina Lopez-Quintero
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摘要

青少年越来越多地同时使用电子烟和大麻,这已成为一项公共卫生挑战。目前的分析旨在确定过去一个月有和没有吸烟史的青少年共同使用电子烟和大麻的流行率和相关性。在这项小组研究中,监测未来研究使用了8年级、10年级和12年级青少年的5年横断面数据(2014-2018年),这是一项对美国学生的全国代表性调查。我们调查了曾吸烟的青少年中电子烟和大麻共同使用的流行率和相关性(n = 15136)和从未使用过烟草的人(n = 56525)。曾吸烟的青少年与从未吸烟的青少年相比,电子烟和大麻的共同使用率明显更高(17.1%对2.2%,p
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Socio-demographic Correlates of Electronic Cigarette and Cannabis Co-use Among Naïve and Tobacco Adolescent Users.

The increasing co-use of e-cigarette and cannabis among youth has become a public health challenge. The present analyses aimed to identify prevalence and correlates of past-month co-use of e-cigarettes and cannabis among adolescents with and without prior tobacco use. For this panel study, 5 years of cross-sectional data (2014-2018) were used from 8th, 10th-, and 12th-grade adolescents in the Monitoring the Future study, a nationally representative survey of U.S. students. We examined prevalence and correlates of e-cigarettes and cannabis co-use among adolescents who had ever used tobacco (n = 15,136) and among those who had never used tobacco (n = 56,525). Adolescents who had ever used tobacco showed significantly higher rates of e-cigarettes and cannabis co-use compared to adolescents who had never used tobacco (17.1% vs. 2.2%, p < 0.01). Results from adjusted multinomial regression models showed that overall, Black and Hispanic adolescents tobacco users were less likely than Whites to co-use e-cigarettes and cannabis. Black adolescents who had used tobacco previously were more likely than Whites to have used cannabis exclusively. Black and Hispanic tobacco-naïve adolescents were more likely than Whites to have used cannabis exclusively, while Black tobacco-naïve adolescents were less likely to use e-cigarettes exclusively or co-use e-cigarettes and cannabis. Overall, males and twelve graders were more likely than males and eight graders to use or co-use cannabis or e-cigarettes, respectively. Among lifetime tobacco users, higher levels of parental education were associated with co-use of cannabis and e-cigarettes. Racial/ethnic-specific patterns of e-cigarette and cannabis co-use depends on adolescents' prior experience with tobacco. The higher rates of use and co-use of e-cigarettes and cannabis among prior tobacco users suggest that targeted interventions are needed for this group. Identified socio-demographic groups at higher risk of co-use of e-cigarettes and cannabis need to be further studied.

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