Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia; Epidemic Intelligence Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Am J Prev Med. 2018 Feb;54(2):284-288. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.09.015. Epub 2017 Nov 9.
Accounting for occasional or intermittent e-cigarette use has yielded higher estimates of current use among U.S. adults. However, frequency of e-cigarette use by population subgroups is not well described. This study assessed e-cigarette use frequency by sociodemographic characteristics and other tobacco product use among U.S. adults.
This study analyzed combined data from the 2012-2013 (n=60,192) and 2013-2014 (n=75,233) National Adult Tobacco Survey, a telephone-based survey of U.S. adults aged ≥18 years, to assess frequency of e-cigarette use (daily, some days, rarely) by sex, age, race/ethnicity, education, annual household income, U.S. region, marital status, sexual orientation, and cigarette smoking and other tobacco product use (cigars, cigarillos, little filtered cigars; traditional pipes; water pipes; and chewing tobacco, snuff, dip, snus, and dissolvable tobacco products). Analyses took place in 2016.
Among current e-cigarette users, 19.3% used daily, 29.3% used some days, and 51.4% used rarely. Daily use was lowest among younger adults, Hispanics, and those who were single, never married, or not living with a partner; and greatest among non-Hispanic Asians (p<0.0001). Among current e-cigarette users, 25.3% were cigarette-only smokers, 52.8% smoked cigarettes and used other tobacco products, 5.5% used other tobacco products only, 6.5% were former cigarette-only smokers, 6.7% were former users of cigarettes and other tobacco products, 1.3% were former other tobacco product users only, and 1.8% never used cigarettes or other tobacco products.
E-cigarette use frequency varies by sociodemographic characteristics and other tobacco use. Further surveillance, particularly related to frequency of e-cigarette use and its impact on cigarette cessation, could inform public health policy, planning, and practice.
在对美国成年人进行的调查中,将偶尔或间歇性使用电子烟的情况纳入考虑,得出了当前使用率更高的结论。然而,不同人群使用电子烟的频率并没有得到很好的描述。本研究评估了美国成年人的电子烟使用频率与社会人口特征及其他烟草制品使用之间的关系。
本研究分析了 2012-2013 年(n=60192)和 2013-2014 年(n=75233)国家成人烟草调查的数据,这是一项针对美国 18 岁及以上成年人的电话调查,评估了电子烟的使用频率(每天、某些天、很少),包括性别、年龄、种族/民族、教育程度、家庭年收入、美国地区、婚姻状况、性取向、以及吸烟和其他烟草制品的使用情况(雪茄、小雪茄、小雪茄;传统烟斗;水烟;以及咀嚼烟草、鼻烟、吸烟、鼻烟和可溶解烟草制品)。分析于 2016 年进行。
在当前使用电子烟的人群中,19.3%的人每天使用,29.3%的人偶尔使用,51.4%的人很少使用。电子烟使用频率最低的人群是年轻人、西班牙裔,以及单身、未婚或未与伴侣同居的人群;使用频率最高的人群是非西班牙裔亚洲人(p<0.0001)。在当前使用电子烟的人群中,25.3%的人只吸烟,52.8%的人吸烟且使用其他烟草制品,5.5%的人只使用其他烟草制品,6.5%的人曾经只吸烟,6.7%的人曾经同时使用香烟和其他烟草制品,1.3%的人曾经只使用其他烟草制品,1.8%的人从未使用过香烟或其他烟草制品。
电子烟的使用频率因社会人口特征和其他烟草制品的使用情况而有所不同。进一步的监测,特别是关于电子烟使用频率及其对戒烟的影响的监测,可以为公共卫生政策、规划和实践提供信息。