Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, Addiction Sciences Division, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 3131 Harvey Avenue, Suite 204, Cincinnati, OH 45229, United States.
University of Texas School of Public Health, 1616 Guadalupe, Suite 6.300, Austin, TX 78701, United States.
Addict Behav. 2020 Mar;102:106153. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.106153. Epub 2019 Oct 19.
Use of menthol cigarettes remains highly prevalent among African American smokers and has increased among White and Hispanic/Latino smokers. Research is needed to examine if behavioral factors, such as marijuana use, are differentially associated with menthol cigarette use among racially/ethnically diverse samples of marijuana users.
Using data from the 2017 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, this study examined the association between past month marijuana (blunt versus non-blunt) and cigarette (non-menthol cigarette versus menthol cigarette versus no cigarette) use, as well as racial/ethnic differences in this relationship.
Among all marijuana users (N = 5,137), 34.1% smoked blunts, 28.7% smoked non-menthol cigarettes and 18.0% smoked menthol cigarettes, with the highest rates of blunt (63.8%) and menthol cigarette (38.9%) use found among African American adults. Multinomial logistic regression analyses revealed a significant association between blunt use and non-menthol cigarette use (versus non-use) and menthol cigarette use (versus non-menthol cigarette and no cigarette use) among the full sample. When stratified by race/ethnicity, this finding was consistent for non-Hispanic White (n = 3,492) and partially consistent for Hispanic/Latino (n = 839) adults. However, among African American adults (n = 806), blunt use was not significantly associated with non-menthol cigarette use or menthol cigarette use.
Blunt use is associated with increased odds of non-menthol and menthol cigarette use, but only among Hispanic/Latino and White adults. Examining racial/ethnic differences in the association between marijuana and tobacco use is important to understanding disparities and informing prevention and treatment interventions and drug policies.
薄荷醇香烟的使用在非裔美国吸烟者中仍然非常普遍,在白人和西班牙裔/拉丁裔吸烟者中也有所增加。需要研究行为因素,如大麻使用,是否与不同种族/族裔的大麻使用者群体中薄荷醇香烟的使用存在差异。
本研究使用 2017 年全国毒品使用与健康调查的数据,研究了过去一个月内大麻(大麻烟与非大麻烟)和香烟(非薄荷醇香烟与薄荷醇香烟与无烟)使用之间的关联,以及这种关系在不同种族/族裔之间的差异。
在所有大麻使用者(N=5137)中,34.1%的人吸大麻烟,28.7%的人吸非薄荷醇香烟,18.0%的人吸薄荷醇香烟,非裔美国成年人中吸大麻烟(63.8%)和薄荷醇香烟(38.9%)的比例最高。多变量逻辑回归分析显示,在全样本中,大麻烟使用与非薄荷醇香烟使用(与不使用相比)和薄荷醇香烟使用(与非薄荷醇香烟和无烟相比)之间存在显著关联。按种族/族裔分层时,这一发现对非西班牙裔白人(n=3492)和西班牙裔/拉丁裔(n=839)成年人是一致的,但对非裔美国成年人(n=806)则不一致。
大麻烟使用与增加非薄荷醇和薄荷醇香烟使用的几率相关,但仅在西班牙裔/拉丁裔和白人成年人中存在。研究大麻和烟草使用之间的关联在不同种族/族裔之间的差异,对于了解差异、为预防和治疗干预措施以及药物政策提供信息非常重要。