Division of Epidemiology, Ohio State University College of Public Health, Columbus, OH, USA.
Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbus, OH, USA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2022 Feb 1;24(2):250-256. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntab196.
Approximately 70% of youth experiencing homelessness smoke cigarettes; many try to quit and are interested in formal smoking cessation programs. The purpose of this study was to describe the intrapersonal, social, and environmental contexts associated with the most recent smoking experience among youth experiencing homelessness and (2) identify differences in contextual factors by age and willingness to quit.
Thirty-six youth experiencing homelessness aged 14-24 years and who reported current smoking were recruited from a drop-in center in a Midwestern city. Semi-structured in-person interviews were analyzed to understand smoking behaviors.
Two-thirds of participants reported stress and nicotine dependence as primary reasons for smoking, and older youth (aged 18-24 years) reported smoking to de-escalate negative emotions associated with stressful events. For 25% of participants, and especially older youth, smoking was described as part of a routine. Over 80% of participants smoked outside at the homeless drop-in center or the places they lived. Social prompts from drop-in center peers regularly preempted smoking. Younger youth (aged 14-17 years) reported smoking socially while older youth were more likely to smoke alone.
For youth experiencing homelessness, smoking is integrated into daily life and is often used to manage stress associated with homelessness and engage socially with homeless peers. Multicomponent interventions to reduce structural stressors specific to homelessness, change social smoking norms (environmental and social context), and address stress management and nicotine dependence (intrapersonal context) are needed to support smoking cessation among youth experiencing homelessness.
Youth experiencing homelessness overwhelmingly described how daily stressors associated with homelessness and nicotine dependence preceded recent smoking. Older youth (aged 18-24 years) also reported smoking as "routine", which likely underscores nicotine dependence in this group. Younger youth (aged 14-17 years) described social smoking. Researchers must develop optimized multilevel interventions to support youth experiencing homelessness who want to quit smoking. Interventions directly targeting social determinants of stress (e.g., poverty, housing instability, food insecurity) and linkages to supportive services are needed. Complementary strategies to address stress coping and nicotine dependence (intrapersonal context) and social smoking norms (social and environmental context) are also necessitated.
大约 70%的无家可归青年吸烟;许多人试图戒烟,并对正规的戒烟计划感兴趣。本研究的目的是描述与无家可归青年最近吸烟经历相关的内在、社会和环境背景,并确定年龄和戒烟意愿的差异。
从中西部城市的一个中途停留中心招募了 36 名年龄在 14-24 岁之间且报告目前吸烟的无家可归青年。对半结构化的面对面访谈进行了分析,以了解吸烟行为。
三分之二的参与者报告压力和尼古丁依赖是吸烟的主要原因,而年长的青年(18-24 岁)报告吸烟是为了缓解与压力事件相关的负面情绪。对于 25%的参与者,尤其是年长的青年,吸烟被描述为日常生活的一部分。超过 80%的参与者在无家可归者中途停留中心或他们居住的地方在户外吸烟。中途停留中心同伴的社会提示经常预先阻止吸烟。年轻的青年(14-17 岁)报告社交时吸烟,而年长的青年更可能独自吸烟。
对于无家可归的青年来说,吸烟融入了日常生活,经常用于管理与无家可归相关的压力,并与无家可归的同龄人进行社交。需要多组分干预措施来减少与无家可归相关的特定结构性压力源,改变与吸烟相关的社会规范(环境和社会背景),并解决压力管理和尼古丁依赖(内在背景),以支持无家可归的青年戒烟。
无家可归的青年压倒性地描述了与无家可归相关的日常压力源和尼古丁依赖如何先于最近的吸烟。年长的青年(18-24 岁)也报告说吸烟是“例行公事”,这可能凸显了该群体中的尼古丁依赖。年轻的青年(14-17 岁)描述了社交吸烟。研究人员必须开发优化的多层次干预措施,以支持希望戒烟的无家可归青年。需要直接针对压力的社会决定因素(例如贫困、住房不稳定、粮食不安全)和与支持性服务的联系的干预措施。还需要补充策略来解决压力应对和尼古丁依赖(内在背景)以及社会吸烟规范(社会和环境背景)。