Terry-McElrath Yvonne M, O'Malley Patrick M
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Addiction. 2015 Jul;110(7):1171-81. doi: 10.1111/add.12926. Epub 2015 Apr 28.
To measure changes over time in cigarette smoking uptake prevalence and timing during young adulthood (ages 19-26 years), and associations between time-invariant/-varying characteristics and uptake prevalence/timing.
Discrete-time survival modeling of data collected from United States high school seniors (modal age 17/18) enrolled in successive graduating classes from 1976 to 2005 and participating in four follow-up surveys (to modal age 25/26).
The longitudinal component of the Monitoring the Future study.
A total of 10 758 individuals reporting no life-time smoking when first surveyed as high school seniors.
Smoking uptake (any, experimental, occasional and regular); socio-demographic variables; marital, college and work status; time spent socializing.
The percentage of young adults moving from non-smoker to experimental smoking [slope estimate 0.11, standard error (SE) = 0.04, P = 0.005] or occasional smoking (slope estimate 0.17, SE = 0.03, P < 0.001) increased significantly across graduating classes; the percentage moving from non-smoker to regular smoker remained stable. All forms of smoking uptake were most likely to occur at age 19/20, but uptake prevalence at older ages increased over time [e.g. cohort year predicting occasional uptake at modal age 25/26 adjusted hazard odds ratio (AHOR) = 1.05, P = 0.002]. Time-invariant/-varying characteristics had unique associations with the timing of various forms of smoking uptake (e.g. at modal age 21/22, currently attending college increased occasional uptake risk (AHOR = 2.11, P < 0.001) but decreased regular uptake risk (AHOR = 0.69, P = 0.026).
Young adult occasional and experimental smoking uptake increased in the United States for non-smoking high school seniors graduating from 1976 to 2005. Smoking uptake for these cohorts remained most likely to occur at age 19/20, but prevalence of uptake at older ages increased.
测量青年期(19 - 26岁)吸烟率及开始吸烟时间随时间的变化,以及时间不变/变化特征与吸烟率/开始吸烟时间之间的关联。
对1976年至2005年连续毕业班级中入学时为美国高中毕业生(平均年龄17/18岁)且参与四次随访调查(至平均年龄25/26岁)的数据进行离散时间生存建模。
“监测未来”研究的纵向部分。
共有10758名个体在首次作为高中毕业生接受调查时报告无终生吸烟史。
吸烟情况(任何形式、尝试性、偶尔性和规律性);社会人口统计学变量;婚姻状况、大学就读情况和工作状况;社交时间。
从非吸烟者转变为尝试性吸烟的青年成年人比例[斜率估计值0.11,标准误(SE)= 0.04,P = 0.005]或偶尔吸烟的比例[斜率估计值0.17,SE = 0.03,P < 0.001]在各毕业班级中显著增加;从非吸烟者转变为规律吸烟者的比例保持稳定。所有形式的吸烟开始情况最有可能发生在19/20岁,但随着时间推移,年龄较大时的吸烟率有所增加[例如,队列年份预测在平均年龄25/26岁时偶尔吸烟的调整风险比(AHOR)= 1.05,P = 0.002]。时间不变/变化特征与各种形式吸烟开始时间有独特的关联(例如,在平均年龄21/22岁时,目前正在上大学会增加偶尔吸烟风险(AHOR = 2.11,P < 0.001),但会降低规律吸烟风险(AHOR = 0.69,P = 0.026)。
在美国,1976年至2005年毕业的非吸烟高中毕业生中,青年成年人偶尔吸烟和尝试吸烟情况有所增加。这些队列的吸烟开始情况最有可能发生在19/20岁,但年龄较大时的吸烟率有所上升。