Institute of Medical Sociology, Medical Faculty, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Halle (Saale), Germany.
Department of Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Eur J Public Health. 2021 Apr 24;31(2):333-340. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckaa241.
Studies on adolescent secondhand smoke exposure within the family often dichotomously operationalize migration background without paying attention to social and cultural diversity within migrant populations. As a result, little is known about variation within migrant groups in smoke-free family environments (SFFEs). This study analyses the association between SFFEs and parental migration from different world regions.
Data from 14- to 16-year-old adolescents (N = 17 144) on SFFEs and parental migration were obtained from cross-sectional repeated SILNE-R surveys. A multivariable multinomial regression was applied, presenting relative risks (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for maternal or paternal tobacco smoking and home smoking bans. Variation in migration background was measured according to parental sex and place of birth.
Approximately 18% of adolescents are exposed to maternal smoking, and 25% are exposed to paternal smoking. Almost half of the respondents do not live in SFFEs but are subject to permissive (5%) or partial (39%) smoking bans at home. We found that adolescents of Eastern European descent are at a higher risk of being exposed to both paternal and maternal smoking. A sex difference in parental smoking was found among Arabic/Islamic migrants, where mothers are less likely to be smokers. Maternal and paternal African origins are associated with prohibitive smoking bans at home. Eastern European mothers show higher odds of permissiveness and freely allowing smoking at home.
Notable within-differences according to parental sex and place of birth were found for SFFEs and should be taken into account when implementing equity-sensitive tobacco prevention programs.
家庭中青少年二手烟暴露的研究通常将移民背景二分法地进行操作,而没有关注移民群体内部的社会和文化多样性。因此,对于无烟家庭环境(SFFE)内移民群体内部的差异知之甚少。本研究分析了 SFFE 与来自不同世界区域的父母移民之间的关联。
从跨期重复 SILNE-R 调查中获取了 14-16 岁青少年(N=17144)关于 SFFE 和父母移民的数据。应用多变量多项回归,呈现了母亲或父亲吸烟和家庭吸烟禁令的相对风险(RR)及其 95%置信区间(CI)。根据父母的性别和出生地来衡量移民背景的差异。
约 18%的青少年接触到母亲吸烟,25%接触到父亲吸烟。近一半的受访者未生活在 SFFE 中,但家中允许(5%)或部分(39%)吸烟。我们发现,东欧裔青少年接触到父母双方吸烟的风险更高。在阿拉伯/穆斯林移民中,父母吸烟存在性别差异,母亲吸烟的可能性较小。非洲裔母亲和父亲与家中禁止吸烟有关。东欧母亲在家中表现出更高的宽容度和允许随意吸烟的可能性。
根据父母的性别和出生地,SFFE 存在显著差异,在实施关注公平的烟草预防计划时应予以考虑。