Weinberger Andrea H, Franco Christine A, Hoff Rani A, Pilver Corey, Steinberg Marvin A, Rugle Loreen, Wampler Jeremy, Cavallo Dana A, Krishnan-Sarin Suchitra, Potenza Marc N
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06519, USA.
Cancer Prevention and Control Research Program, Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Addict Behav Rep. 2015 Feb 10;1:40-48. doi: 10.1016/j.abrep.2015.01.001. eCollection 2015 Jun.
Smoking and gambling are two significant public health concerns. Little is known about the association of smoking and gambling in adolescents. The current study of high-school adolescents examined: (1) smoking behavior by problem-gambling severity and (2) health-related variables by problem-gambling severity and smoking status.
Analyses utilized survey data from 1591 Connecticut high-school students. Adolescents were classified by problem-gambling severity (Low-Risk Gambling [LRG], At-Risk/Problem Gambling [ARPG]) and smoking status (current smoker, non-smoker). Analyses examined the smoking behavior of ARPG versus LRG adolescents as well as the smoking-by-problem-gambling-severity interactions for health and well-being measures (e.g., grades, substance use). Chi-square and logistic regression analyses were used; the latter controlled for gender, race/ethnicity, school grade, and family structure.
More adolescents with ARPG than LRG reported regular smoking, heavy smoking, early smoking onset, no smoking quit attempts, and parental approval of smoking. ARPG and LRG adolescents who smoked were more likely to report poor grades, lifetime use of marijuana and other drugs, current heavy alcohol use, current caffeine use, depression, and aggressive behaviors and less likely to report participation in extracurricular activities. The association between not participating in extracurricular activities and smoking was statistically stronger in the LRG compared to the ARPG groups. Post-hoc analyses implicated a range of extracurricular activities including team sports, school clubs, and church activities.
Smoking was associated with poorer health-related behaviors in both ARPG and LRG groups. Interventions with adolescents may benefit from targeting both smoking and gambling.
吸烟和赌博是两个重大的公共卫生问题。关于青少年吸烟与赌博之间的关联,我们知之甚少。当前这项针对高中生的研究考察了:(1)按问题赌博严重程度划分的吸烟行为,以及(2)按问题赌博严重程度和吸烟状况划分的与健康相关的变量。
分析使用了来自康涅狄格州1591名高中生的调查数据。青少年按问题赌博严重程度(低风险赌博[LRG]、有风险/问题赌博[ARPG])和吸烟状况(当前吸烟者、非吸烟者)进行分类。分析考察了ARPG青少年与LRG青少年的吸烟行为,以及健康和幸福指标(如成绩、物质使用)方面按问题赌博严重程度划分的吸烟交互作用。使用了卡方检验和逻辑回归分析;后者对性别种族/族裔、年级和家庭结构进行了控制。
与LRG青少年相比,更多的ARPG青少年报告有经常吸烟、大量吸烟、吸烟起始早、没有戒烟尝试以及父母对吸烟的认可情况。吸烟的ARPG青少年和LRG青少年更有可能报告成绩差、终生使用大麻和其他毒品、当前大量饮酒、当前使用咖啡因、抑郁和攻击性行为,而不太可能报告参与课外活动。与ARPG组相比,LRG组中不参与课外活动与吸烟之间的关联在统计学上更强。事后分析涉及一系列课外活动,包括团队运动、学校俱乐部和教会活动。
吸烟与ARPG组和LRG组中较差的健康相关行为有关。针对青少年的干预措施可能同时针对吸烟和赌博会更有益。