MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Population, Policy and Practice Research and Teaching Department, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Eur J Public Health. 2021 Oct 11;31(4):756-763. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckab102.
Parental smoking strongly influences adolescent smoking, yet few studies have examined factors that may protect against this. We investigated whether skills-based components of positive mental health ('mental health competence', MHC) modified the association between parental and teenager smoking, in the UK-representative Millennium Cohort Study (approximately 18 000 children, born 2000-02; analytic sample: n = 10 133).
Cohort members (CMs) reported at 14 years (y) whether they had ever smoked cigarettes. A dichotomized variable indicated whether one/both parents smoked when CMs were 11 y. A four-class latent MHC measure captured learning skills and prosocial behaviours at 11 y: High, High-Moderate, Moderate, Low. We examined effect measure modification (on the additive scale) by comparing risk differences (RDs) for CM smoking according to parental smoking, within each MHC class. We then estimated RDs for CM smoking according to combinations of parental smoking and MHC. Analyses accounted for confounding, sample design, attrition and item missingness.
CMs were more likely to smoke cigarettes if their parent(s) smoked (27%) than CMs with no parent(s) who smoked (11%; RD: 16%). When stratified by MHC, RDs were stronger for low MHC (21%; 95% CI 11-31%) than other MHC classes (ranging: 7-11%). Compared to CMs with high MHC and non-smoker parents, those with low MHC and parent(s) who smoked had an RD of 28% (95% CI 20-36%). This was greater than the sum of RDs for those with low MHC and non-smoker parent(s) [7% (2-14%)] plus those with high MHC and whose parent(s) smoked [11% (7-15%)]. There was limited effect measure modification by moderate or High-Moderate MHC.
Improving MHC to moderate levels may help reduce intergenerational transference of smoking.
父母吸烟对青少年吸烟有很大影响,但很少有研究探讨可能预防这种影响的因素。我们调查了积极心理健康的技能因素(“心理健康能力”,MHC)是否会改变父母与青少年吸烟之间的关联,该研究使用的是具有英国代表性的千禧年队列研究(约 18000 名儿童,出生于 2000-02 年;分析样本:n=10133)。
队列成员(CM)在 14 岁时报告他们是否曾经吸烟过。当 CM 为 11 岁时,一个二分变量表示父母一方或双方是否吸烟。11 岁时的四个类别的潜在 MHC 测量值捕获了学习技能和亲社会行为:高、高-中、中、低。我们通过比较每个 MHC 类别中父母吸烟情况下 CM 吸烟的风险差异(RD),来检验效应量修饰(在加性尺度上)。然后,我们根据父母吸烟和 MHC 的组合来估计 CM 吸烟的 RD。分析考虑了混杂因素、样本设计、流失和项目缺失。
如果父母吸烟(27%),CM 更有可能吸烟,而父母都不吸烟的 CM 吸烟的比例为 11%(RD:16%)。按 MHC 分层,低 MHC 的 RD 更强(21%;95%CI 11-31%),而其他 MHC 类别则为 7-11%(范围)。与具有高 MHC 和非吸烟者父母的 CM 相比,具有低 MHC 和吸烟父母的 CM 的 RD 为 28%(95%CI 20-36%)。这大于低 MHC 和非吸烟者父母的 RD 之和[7%(2-14%)]加上具有高 MHC 和吸烟者父母的 RD 之和[11%(7-15%)]。中等或高-中等 MHC 的效应量修饰作用有限。
将 MHC 提高到中等水平可能有助于减少吸烟的代际传递。