Lisha Nadra E, Jordan Jeffrey W, Ling Pamela M
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Rescue, San Diego, California, USA.
Tob Control. 2016 Oct;25(Suppl 1):i83-i89. doi: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2016-053086.
In California, young adult tobacco prevention is of prime importance; 63% of smokers start by the age of 18 years, and 97% start by the age of 26 years. We examined social affiliation with 'peer crowd' (eg, Hipsters) as an innovative way to identify high-risk tobacco users.
Cross-sectional surveys were conducted in 2014 (N=3368) among young adult bar patrons in 3 California cities. We examined use rates of five products (cigarettes, e-cigarettes, hookah, cigars and smokeless tobacco) by five race/ethnicity categories. Peer crowd affiliation was scored based on respondents' selecting pictures of young adults representing those most and least likely to be in their friend group. Respondents were classified into categories based on the highest score; the peer crowd score was also examined as a continuous predictor. Logistic regression models with each tobacco product as the outcome tested the unique contribution of peer crowd affiliation, controlling for race/ethnicity, age, sex, sexual orientation and city.
Respondents affiliating with Hip Hop and Hipster peer crowds reported significantly higher rates of tobacco use. As a categorical predictor, peer crowd was related to tobacco use, independent of associations with race/ethnicity. As a continuous predictor, Hip Hop peer crowd affiliation was also associated with tobacco use, and Young Professional affiliation was negatively associated, independent of demographic factors.
Tobacco product use is not the same across racial/ethnic groups or peer crowds, and peer crowd predicts tobacco use independent of race/ethnicity. Antitobacco interventions targeting peer crowds may be an effective way to reach young adult tobacco users.
NCT01686178, Pre-results.
在加利福尼亚州,预防青少年吸烟至关重要;63%的吸烟者在18岁前开始吸烟,97%在26岁前开始吸烟。我们研究了与“同龄人圈子”(如潮人)的社交关系,以此作为识别高风险烟草使用者的一种创新方法。
2014年在加利福尼亚州3个城市的年轻成年酒吧顾客中进行了横断面调查(N = 3368)。我们按五个种族/族裔类别研究了五种产品(香烟、电子烟、水烟、雪茄和无烟烟草)的使用率。同龄人圈子的归属是根据受访者选择代表最有可能和最不可能在其朋友圈中的年轻人的图片来评分的。受访者根据最高分被分类;同龄人圈子得分也作为连续预测变量进行检验。以每种烟草产品为结果的逻辑回归模型测试了同龄人圈子归属的独特贡献,同时控制种族/族裔、年龄、性别、性取向和城市因素。
与嘻哈和潮人同龄人圈子有联系的受访者报告的烟草使用率显著更高。作为分类预测变量,同龄人圈子与烟草使用有关,独立于与种族/族裔的关联。作为连续预测变量,嘻哈同龄人圈子的归属也与烟草使用有关,而年轻专业人士圈子的归属则呈负相关,独立于人口统计学因素。
不同种族/族裔群体或同龄人圈子的烟草产品使用情况不同,同龄人圈子独立于种族/族裔预测烟草使用。针对同龄人圈子的反烟草干预措施可能是接触年轻成年烟草使用者的有效方法。
NCT01686178,预结果。