Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, 389 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO, 63116, USA.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2021 Jun;56(6):981-992. doi: 10.1007/s00127-020-01984-9. Epub 2021 Jan 2.
To characterize the association of social class discrimination with the timing of first cigarette use and progression to DSM-IV nicotine dependence (ND) in Black and White youth, examining variation by race, parent vs. youth experiences of discrimination, socioeconomic status (SES), and stage of smoking.
Data were drawn from 1461 youth (55.2% Black, 44.8% White; 50.2% female) and mothers in a high-risk family study of alcohol use disorder and related conditions. Cox proportional hazard regression analyses were conducted, using youth's and mother's social class discrimination to predict first cigarette use and progression to ND, stratifying by race. Interactions between discrimination and SES indicators (parental education and household income) were tested. Adjusted models included psychiatric covariates.
In the adjusted first cigarette use models, neither youth's nor mother's social class discrimination was a significant predictor among Black youth, but mother's discrimination was associated with increased risk [HR = 1.53 (1.18-1.99)] among White youth. In the adjusted ND models, mother's discrimination was associated with reduced ND risk for Black youth in middle-income families [HR = 0.29 (CI 0.13-0.63)], but neither youth's nor mother's discrimination predicted transition to ND among White youth.
The observed race and smoking stage-specific effects suggest that social class discrimination is more impactful on early stages of smoking for White youth and later stages for Black youth. The robustness of links with mother's discrimination experiences further suggests the importance of considering family-level effects and the need to explore possible mechanisms, such as socialization processes.
描述社会阶层歧视与黑人和白人青少年首次吸烟和发展为 DSM-IV 尼古丁依赖(ND)的时间之间的关联,同时考察种族、父母与青少年歧视经历、社会经济地位(SES)和吸烟阶段的差异。
数据来自一项针对酒精使用障碍和相关疾病的高危家庭研究中的 1461 名青少年(55.2%为黑人,44.8%为白人;50.2%为女性)及其母亲。采用 Cox 比例风险回归分析,使用青少年和母亲的社会阶层歧视来预测首次吸烟和发展为 ND 的情况,并按种族进行分层。检验歧视与 SES 指标(父母教育和家庭收入)之间的交互作用。调整后的模型包括精神科协变量。
在调整后的首次吸烟模型中,无论是青少年还是母亲的社会阶层歧视都不是黑人青少年的显著预测因素,但母亲的歧视与白人青少年的风险增加相关[风险比(HR)=1.53(1.18-1.99)]。在调整后的 ND 模型中,母亲的歧视与中等收入家庭中黑人青少年的 ND 风险降低相关[HR=0.29(CI 0.13-0.63)],但青少年和母亲的歧视都不能预测白人青少年向 ND 的转变。
观察到的种族和吸烟阶段特异性效应表明,社会阶层歧视对白人青少年的早期吸烟阶段和黑人青少年的后期吸烟阶段影响更大。与母亲歧视经历的联系具有稳健性,进一步表明考虑家庭层面效应的重要性,需要探索可能的机制,如社会化过程。