Shepardson Robyn L, Hustad John T P
Center for Integrated Healthcare, Syracuse VA Medical Center, Syracuse, NY;
Department of Medicine and Public Health Sciences, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2016 May;18(5):763-9. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv170. Epub 2015 Aug 10.
The prevalence of hookah tobacco smoking is increasing, and the transition to college is a vulnerable time for initiation. Hookah use is associated with other forms of substance use, but most research has been cross-sectional, thus limiting our understanding of temporal patterns of use. The goals of this longitudinal study were to assess the prevalence of hookah use and initiation, as well as other forms of substance use among hookah users, and identify which forms of substance use predicted hookah initiation during the first 30 days of college.
Incoming students (N = 936, 50% female) reported on past 30-day substance use prior to the start of the Fall 2011 semester and again 30 days later (n = 817). Substances included hookah, cigarettes, other forms of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, and other illegal drugs.
Current prevalence of hookah use increased from 9.0% before college to 13.1% during the first month of college. At baseline and follow-up, current hookah users were more likely than nonusers to report current use of cigarettes, cigars/little cigars/clove cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, marijuana, and alcohol. Among pre-college hookah never users, 13.8% initiated hookah use in the first month of college. Alcohol (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 1.11, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.05, 1.17) and marijuana (AOR 1.30, 95% CI 1.03, 1.65) were the only substances predictive of hookah initiation.
Findings indicate that hookah prevention and intervention is needed during the transition to college, and interventions may need to address comorbid alcohol, marijuana, and hookah use.
To our knowledge this is the first longitudinal study examining predictors of hookah initiation among male and female incoming first-year college students. While hookah users were more likely than nonusers to use all other substances before and during the first month of college, pre-college marijuana and alcohol use were the only two predictors of hookah initiation during the first 30 days of college. Collectively, these findings provide additional support for the need for efficacious hookah prevention and intervention programs. The transition to college appears to be an ideal time to deliver prevention programs given the increased prevalence of hookah use during the first 30 days of college. In addition to prevention, former users may benefit from targeted relapse prevention as one-fifth of former hookah smokers resumed use during the first 30 days of college.
水烟吸食的流行率正在上升,而进入大学阶段是开始吸食水烟的一个易受影响时期。水烟使用与其他形式的物质使用有关,但大多数研究都是横断面研究,因此限制了我们对使用时间模式的理解。这项纵向研究的目的是评估水烟使用和开始吸食水烟的流行率,以及水烟使用者中其他形式的物质使用情况,并确定在大学的前30天内哪些形式的物质使用可预测水烟吸食的开始。
入学新生(N = 936,50%为女性)在2011年秋季学期开始前报告过去30天的物质使用情况,并在30天后再次报告(n = 817)。物质包括水烟、香烟、其他烟草形式、酒精、大麻和其他非法药物。
水烟使用的当前流行率从大学前的9.0%上升到大学第一个月的13.1%。在基线和随访时,当前的水烟使用者比非使用者更有可能报告当前使用香烟、雪茄/小雪茄/丁香烟、无烟烟草、大麻和酒精。在大学前从未使用过水烟的人中,13.8%在大学第一个月开始使用水烟。酒精(调整后的优势比[AOR] 1.11,95%置信区间[CI] 1.05, 1.17)和大麻(AOR 1.30,95% CI 1.03, 1.65)是仅有的可预测水烟吸食开始的物质。
研究结果表明,在向大学过渡期间需要进行水烟预防和干预,并且干预措施可能需要解决酒精、大麻和水烟使用并存的问题。
据我们所知,这是第一项研究男女入学一年级大学生水烟吸食开始的预测因素的纵向研究。虽然水烟使用者在大学前和大学第一个月期间比非使用者更有可能使用所有其他物质,但大学前的大麻和酒精使用是大学前30天内水烟吸食开始的仅有的两个预测因素。总体而言,这些发现为有效的水烟预防和干预项目的必要性提供了额外支持。鉴于大学前30天内水烟使用流行率的上升,向大学过渡似乎是开展预防项目的理想时机。除了预防之外,以前的使用者可能会从有针对性的复发预防中受益,因为五分之一的前水烟吸烟者在大学前30天内恢复了使用。