Delnevo Cristine D, Giovenco Daniel P, Steinberg Michael B, Villanti Andrea C, Pearson Jennifer L, Niaura Raymond S, Abrams David B
Center for Tobacco Studies, Rutgers School of Public Health, New Brunswick, NJ; Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ;
Center for Tobacco Studies, Rutgers School of Public Health, New Brunswick, NJ;
Nicotine Tob Res. 2016 May;18(5):715-9. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv237. Epub 2015 Nov 2.
Amid increasing rates of electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use in the United States, there is an urgent need to monitor patterns of use at the population level in order to inform practice, policy and regulation. This article examines how patterns of e-cigarette use among adults differ between users and nonusers of cigarettes using the most current national data.
We analyzed data from the 2014 National Health Interview Survey. We estimated prevalence of ever, current, and daily e-cigarette use and examined how use patterns differed by demographic subgroups and measures of cigarette smoking status that accounted for the recent availability of e-cigarettes in the US marketplace.
Current e-cigarette use is extremely low among never cigarette smokers (0.4%) and former smokers who quit cigarettes 4 or more years ago (0.8%). Although e-cigarette experimentation is most common among current cigarette smokers and young adults, daily use is highest among former smokers who quit in the past year (13.0%) and older adults. Compared to daily cigarette smokers, recently quit smokers were more than four times as likely to be daily users of e-cigarettes (AOR: 4.33 [95% CI: 3.08-6.09]).
Extremely low e-cigarette use among never-smokers and longer term former smokers suggest that e-cigarettes neither promote widespread initiation nor relapse among adults. Recognition of the heterogeneity of smokers, including the time since quitting, is critical to draw accurate conclusions about patterns of e-cigarette use at the population level and its potential for public health benefit or harm.
Data from 2014 National Health Interview Survey indicate that e-cigarettes have not been attracting adult non-smokers or promoting relapse in longer term former smokers. Moreover, the data are suggestive that some recent quitters may have done so with the assistance of e-cigarettes. Creating measures of smoking status that treat former smokers as a homogenous group is insufficient to assess the epidemiology of e-cigarette use and the potential impact on public health.
在美国,电子烟的使用率不断上升,迫切需要在人群层面监测其使用模式,以便为实践、政策和监管提供依据。本文利用最新的全国数据,研究了成年人中电子烟使用者和非使用者在使用模式上的差异。
我们分析了2014年全国健康访谈调查的数据。我们估计了曾经使用、当前使用和每日使用电子烟的流行率,并研究了使用模式如何因人口亚组以及考虑到美国市场上电子烟近期可得性的吸烟状况指标而有所不同。
从不吸烟者(0.4%)和4年或更久以前戒烟的前吸烟者(0.8%)中当前使用电子烟的比例极低。虽然电子烟尝试在当前吸烟者和年轻人中最为常见,但每日使用在过去一年戒烟的前吸烟者(13.0%)和老年人中最高。与每日吸烟者相比,近期戒烟者成为电子烟每日使用者的可能性高出四倍多(调整后比值比:[95%置信区间:3.08 - 6.09])。
从不吸烟者和长期前吸烟者中电子烟使用率极低,这表明电子烟既不会促使成年人广泛开始使用,也不会导致复吸。认识到吸烟者的异质性,包括戒烟后的时间,对于在人群层面得出关于电子烟使用模式及其对公共卫生潜在益处或危害的准确结论至关重要。
2014年全国健康访谈调查的数据表明,电子烟并未吸引成年非吸烟者,也未促使长期前吸烟者复吸。此外,数据表明一些近期戒烟者可能是在电子烟的帮助下戒烟的。将前吸烟者视为同质群体来制定吸烟状况衡量标准,不足以评估电子烟使用的流行病学情况及其对公共卫生的潜在影响。