The Schroeder Institute for Tobacco Research and Policy Studies at Truth Initiative, 900 G Street NW, Fourth Floor, Washington, DC 20001, USA; Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont College of Medicine, 1 South Prospect Street, MS 482, Burlington, VT 05401, USA; Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
The Schroeder Institute for Tobacco Research and Policy Studies at Truth Initiative, 900 G Street NW, Fourth Floor, Washington, DC 20001, USA.
Prev Med. 2017 Nov;104:63-70. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.06.019. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
Young adulthood is defined by transitions in family life, living situations, educational settings, and employment. As a result, education and income may not be appropriate measures of socioeconomic status (SES) in young people. Using a national sample of young adults aged 18-34 (n=3364; collected February 2016), we explored novel socioeconomic correlates of ever cigarette use, past 30-day cigarette use, and daily cigarette use, weighted to account for non-response. Measures of SES assessed current education, household income, employment status, and subjective financial situation (SFS) and childhood SES (maternal and paternal education, SFS during childhood, parental divorce before age 18). Parental smoking during childhood was examined in sensitivity analyses. The highest prevalence of ever cigarette use was in young adults whose parents divorced before age 18 (57% vs. 47% overall). In general, current education, subjective financial status, and parental education were inversely correlated with past 30-day and daily cigarette use in bivariate analyses. In multivariable Poisson regression models controlling for age, gender, race/ethnicity, and other SES measures, lower education and poorer SFS were most strongly correlated with ever and past 30-day cigarette use. Lower maternal education emerged as the strongest correlate of daily smoking, conferring a twofold higher prevalence of daily smoking compared to maternal education of a Bachelor's degree or greater. Current household income was not a strong predictor of any cigarette use outcome. Novel measures like SFS may improve estimates of socioeconomic disadvantage during this developmental stage.
成年早期的特点是家庭生活、生活环境、教育环境和就业的转变。因此,在年轻人中,教育和收入可能不是社会经济地位(SES)的适当衡量标准。使用一个 18-34 岁的年轻人全国样本(n=3364;收集于 2016 年 2 月),我们探讨了从未吸烟、过去 30 天吸烟和每天吸烟的新颖的社会经济相关性,加权以考虑无应答情况。SES 的衡量标准评估了当前的教育、家庭收入、就业状况和主观财务状况(SFS)以及儿童时期的 SES(母亲和父亲的教育程度、儿童时期的 SFS、父母在 18 岁之前离婚)。在敏感性分析中检查了儿童时期父母吸烟的情况。在父母在 18 岁之前离婚的年轻人中,曾经吸烟的比例最高(57%比总体的 47%)。一般来说,在单变量分析中,当前的教育程度、主观财务状况和父母的教育程度与过去 30 天和每天吸烟呈负相关。在多变量泊松回归模型中,控制年龄、性别、种族/族裔和其他 SES 措施,较低的教育程度和较差的 SFS 与曾经和过去 30 天吸烟的相关性最强。较低的母亲教育程度是与每天吸烟最密切相关的因素,与母亲教育程度为学士学位或更高的人相比,每天吸烟的比例高出两倍。当前家庭收入并不是任何吸烟结果的有力预测因素。像 SFS 这样的新措施可能会提高在这个发育阶段社会经济劣势的估计。