Department of Community and Behavioral Health, University of Iowa College of Public Health, Iowa City, IA.
Health Promotion Research Center, Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2021 Feb 16;23(3):505-510. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntaa037.
Most adolescents reporting e-cigarette use have also used combustible tobacco; however, the extent to which they use other substances is less clear. This study assessed e-cigarette use with tobacco, alcohol, or cannabis and quantified the risk of polysubstance use among adolescents overall and by sociodemographic characteristics.
Using 2017 Youth Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data from adolescents (grades 9-12) with complete substance use information (n = 11 244), we examined e-cigarette poly-use status (none [referent], e-cigarettes only, or e-cigarettes + other substances). We estimated the prevalence of substance use and modeled odds of e-cigarette use, alone or with other substances, by several sociodemographic characteristics. Analyses were completed in Stata version 15.1 using survey procedures to account for the complex survey design.
Approximately 12% of adolescents reported past 30-day e-cigarette use. Almost all (93%) e-cigarette users also reported other substance use; alcohol appeared most frequently in combinations. Odds of e-cigarette single use and e-cigarette poly-use (vs. no use) were higher for males and adolescents with lower grades (odds ratios [ORs] = 1.44-2.31). Racial/ethnic minorities had lower odds of e-cigarette poly-use than White peers (ORs = 0.18-0.61), and bisexual (vs. straight) adolescents were more likely to be e-cigarette poly-users (OR = 1.62). E-cigarette use increased from 9th grade (7%) to 12th grade (16%).
Polysubstance use is highly prevalent among adolescents who use e-cigarettes. Therefore, e-cigarette screening should include the assessment of other substances, especially alcohol. Early and comprehensive prevention efforts to reduce e-cigarette and other substance use could have a substantial beneficial impact on population health over time.
This study extends knowledge about e-cigarette use among adolescents by exploring its use with alcohol, cannabis, and other tobacco products. We found that e-cigarettes were very rarely used alone, and our analysis identified several sociodemographic factors associated with greater odds of e-cigarette polysubstance use. In response, we recommend that prevention interventions address multiple substances concurrently, screen repeatedly to detect new initiation as age increases, focus on e-cigarette use as a less stigmatized entry point to discussions of substance use, and target priority population subgroups.
大多数报告使用电子烟的青少年也使用可燃烟草;然而,他们使用其他物质的程度不太清楚。本研究评估了电子烟与烟草、酒精或大麻的使用情况,并量化了青少年总体和按社会人口特征使用多种物质的风险。
使用来自有完整物质使用信息的青少年(9-12 年级,n=11244)的 2017 年青少年行为风险因素监测系统数据,我们检查了电子烟多用途的状况(无[参照]、电子烟仅使用或电子烟+其他物质)。我们估计了物质使用的流行率,并通过几种社会人口特征模型化了单独或与其他物质一起使用电子烟的可能性。使用 Stata 版本 15.1 中的调查程序完成分析,以考虑到复杂的调查设计。
大约 12%的青少年报告过去 30 天使用电子烟。几乎所有(93%)电子烟使用者也报告了其他物质使用;酒精在组合中出现得最频繁。电子烟单一使用和电子烟多用途(与不使用)的可能性对于男性和年级较低的青少年(比值比[ORs] = 1.44-2.31)更高。与白人同龄人相比,少数族裔的电子烟多用途可能性较低(ORs = 0.18-0.61),而双性恋(与异性恋)青少年更有可能成为电子烟多用途者(OR = 1.62)。电子烟使用从 9 年级(7%)增加到 12 年级(16%)。
电子烟使用者中普遍存在多种物质使用。因此,电子烟筛查应包括对其他物质的评估,特别是酒精。随着时间的推移,早期和全面的预防措施减少电子烟和其他物质的使用可能会对人群健康产生重大的有益影响。
本研究通过探索电子烟与酒精、大麻和其他烟草产品的使用情况,扩展了青少年电子烟使用的知识。我们发现电子烟很少单独使用,我们的分析确定了几个与电子烟多用途使用可能性更高相关的社会人口因素。作为回应,我们建议预防干预措施同时针对多种物质,随着年龄的增长,反复筛查以发现新的起始使用,将电子烟使用作为讨论物质使用的一个不太污名化的切入点,并针对重点人群亚组。