Villanti Andrea C, Pearson Jennifer L, Glasser Allison M, Johnson Amanda L, Collins Lauren K, Niaura Raymond S, Abrams David B
The Schroeder Institute for Tobacco Research and Policy Studies at Truth Initiative, Washington, DC.
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2017 Nov 1;19(11):1345-1350. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw388.
E-cigarette use occurs with tobacco product use in youth.
Using the 2014 National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS), we examined past 30-day frequency of cigarette, cigar, smokeless, and e-cigarette use in the context of past 30-day and ever tobacco product use in US middle and high school students (N = 22 007). Frequency of product-specific use was examined by exclusive versus concurrent use with another product in the past 30 days (poly-use).
In 2014, the majority (83%) of US middle and high school students had not used tobacco or e-cigarettes in the past 30 days. In the 9.3% of youth reporting any past 30-day e-cigarette use, 63% also reported using a tobacco product; among the 3.3% past 30-day exclusive e-cigarette users, about two-thirds (2.1%) had ever used combustible or non-combustible tobacco products and one-third (1.2%) had not. Few never tobacco users had used e-cigarettes on 10 or more days in the past month (absolute percent < 0.1%). Among past 30-day cigarette and smokeless users, the two highest frequency categories were 1-2 days and daily use; among past 30-day e-cigarette and cigar users, prevalence decreased with increasing frequency of use. The majority of past 30-day cigarette, cigar, smokeless, and e-cigarette users reported poly-use.
Prevalence estimates for a single product mask the complex patterns of frequency, temporality, and poly-use in youth. Two-thirds of past 30-day exclusive e-cigarette users have ever used tobacco. Poly-use is the dominant pattern of tobacco and e-cigarette use among US middle and high school students.
Our study highlights the complexity of tobacco use patterns in US middle and high school students. Future studies addressing the full public health impact of movement into or out of combustible tobacco use will require longitudinal data with appropriate measures of tobacco and e-cigarette product-specific use (eg, frequency and intensity), as well as adequate sample size and a sufficient number of waves to determine how use of individual products, like e-cigarettes, impact progression into or out of more stable patterns of tobacco and e-cigarette use.
青少年中存在电子烟使用与烟草制品使用并存的情况。
利用2014年全国青少年烟草调查(NYTS),我们在美国初高中学生(N = 22007)中,研究了过去30天内香烟、雪茄、无烟烟草和电子烟的使用频率,以及过去30天和曾经使用过烟草制品的情况。通过过去30天内与另一种产品的排他性使用与同时使用(多种烟草制品混合使用),来研究特定产品的使用频率。
2014年,大多数(83%)美国初高中学生在过去30天内未使用过烟草或电子烟。在报告过去30天内有过电子烟使用的9.3%的青少年中,63%也报告使用过烟草制品;在过去30天内排他性使用电子烟的3.3%的青少年中,约三分之二(2.1%)曾使用过可燃或不可燃烟草制品,三分之一(1.2%)未曾使用过。很少有从未使用过烟草的青少年在过去一个月内使用电子烟达10天或以上(绝对百分比<0.1%)。在过去30天内使用香烟和无烟烟草的人群中,使用频率最高的两类是1 - 2天和每天使用;在过去30天内使用电子烟和雪茄的人群中,随着使用频率增加,流行率下降。过去30天内使用香烟、雪茄、无烟烟草和电子烟的大多数人报告有多种烟草制品混合使用的情况。
单一产品的流行率估计掩盖了青少年使用频率、时间性和多种烟草制品混合使用的复杂模式。过去30天内排他性使用电子烟的人群中,三分之二曾使用过烟草。多种烟草制品混合使用是美国初高中学生烟草和电子烟使用的主要模式。
我们的研究突出了美国初高中学生烟草使用模式的复杂性。未来研究若要全面评估转向或停止使用可燃烟草对公众健康的影响,将需要纵向数据,且要有针对烟草和电子烟特定产品使用的适当测量方法(如频率和强度),以及足够的样本量和充足的调查波次,以确定像电子烟这样的单一产品的使用如何影响更稳定的烟草和电子烟使用模式的转变。