Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can. 2019 Jun;39(6-7):207-215. doi: 10.24095/hpcdp.39.6/7.01.
Ongoing surveillance of youth substance use is essential to quantify harms and to identify populations at higher risk. In the Canadian context, historical and structural injustices make monitoring excess risk among Indigenous youth particularly important. This study updated national prevalence rates of tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use among Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.
Differences in tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use were examined, using logistic regression, among 1700 Indigenous and 22 800 non-Indigenous youth in Grades 9-12 who participated in the 2014/15 Canadian Student Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey. Differences by sex were also examined. Mean age of first alcohol and marijuana use was compared in the two populations using OLS regression. Results were compared to 2008/09 data.
While smoking, alcohol, and marijuana rates have decreased compared to 2008/09 in both populations, the gap between the populations has mostly not. In 2014/15, Indigenous youth had higher odds of smoking (odds ratio [OR]: 5.26; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.54-7.81) and past-year drinking (OR: 1.43; 95% CI: 1.16- 1.76) than non-Indigenous youth. More Indigenous than non-Indigenous youth attempted quitting smoking. Non-Indigenous males were less likely to have had at least one drink in the past-year compared to non-Indigenous females. Indigenous males and females had higher odds of past-year marijuana use than non-Indigenous males (OR: 1.84; 95% CI: 1.32-2.56) and females (OR: 2.87; 95% CI: 2.15-3.84). Indigenous youth, especially males, drank alcohol and used marijuana at younger ages.
Additional policies and programs are required to help Indigenous youth be successful in their attempts to quit smoking, and to address high rates of alcohol and marijuana use.
持续监测青少年物质使用情况对于量化危害并识别高风险人群至关重要。在加拿大的背景下,历史和结构性不公正使得监测原住民青年的过度风险尤为重要。本研究更新了全国 9-12 年级原住民和非原住民学生中烟草、酒精和大麻使用的流行率。
使用逻辑回归,比较了参加 2014/15 年加拿大学生烟草、酒精和毒品调查的 1700 名原住民和 22800 名非原住民青少年中,烟草、酒精和大麻使用的差异。还检查了性别差异。使用 OLS 回归比较了这两个群体中首次使用酒精和大麻的平均年龄。结果与 2008/09 年的数据进行了比较。
尽管在两个群体中,与 2008/09 年相比,吸烟、饮酒和吸食大麻的比例都有所下降,但两个群体之间的差距并没有缩小。在 2014/15 年,原住民青年吸烟(优势比[OR]:5.26;95%置信区间[CI]:3.54-7.81)和过去一年饮酒(OR:1.43;95%CI:1.16-1.76)的几率高于非原住民青年。尝试戒烟的原住民青年比非原住民青年多。与非原住民女性相比,非原住民男性过去一年至少喝过一次酒的可能性较小。过去一年,原住民男性和女性吸食大麻的几率高于非原住民男性(OR:1.84;95%CI:1.32-2.56)和女性(OR:2.87;95%CI:2.15-3.84)。原住民青年,尤其是男性,在更年轻时就开始饮酒和吸食大麻。
需要采取更多的政策和方案,帮助原住民青年戒烟成功,并解决高酒精和大麻使用率的问题。