Department of Prevention and Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA; George Washington Cancer Center, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Department of Prevention and Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Addict Behav. 2022 Jun;129:107264. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107264. Epub 2022 Feb 2.
In recent years, cigarette use has decreased, but alternative tobacco product and cannabis use has increased in young adults. Thus, research regarding intraindividual changes in tobacco product and cannabis use in this population, and related psychosocial predictors, is warranted.
We analyzed data from 3,006 young adults (M = 24.56 [SD = 4.72], 54.8% female, 31.6% sexual minority, 60.2% racial/ethnic minority) in a 2-year, 5-wave longitudinal study (2018-2020). Latent growth modeling analyzed the outcomes of past 6-month use of cigarettes, e-cigarettes, traditional cigars, little cigars/cigarillos, smokeless tobacco (SLT), hookah, and cannabis across Waves 1-5 among all participants; psychosocial predictors included depressive symptoms, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), and personality traits.
Results indicated decreases in likelihood of using each tobacco product over time, but no significant change in likelihood of cannabis use. Psychosocial predictors of baseline use across products included depressive symptoms and extraversion, as well as ACEs and openness for nearly all products (e.g., except traditional cigars). Psychosocial predictors of less decreases in use likelihood over time included: for cigarettes and traditional cigars, ACEs; for e-cigarettes, extraversion; for little cigars/cigarillos, depressive symptoms and extraversion; for SLT, openness; and for hookah, neuroticism (controlling for sociodemographics). Predictors of greater decreases in likelihood of use over time included: for e-cigarettes and hookah, conscientiousness; and for cannabis, agreeableness.
Interventions to reduce young adults' use might target distinct risk/protective factors for using different products (and combinations). Moreover, results regarding decreasing likelihood of using tobacco products but not cannabis over time warrant replication and explanation in other samples.
近年来,年轻人中的吸烟率有所下降,但使用替代烟草产品和大麻的情况有所增加。因此,有必要研究这一人群中烟草产品和大麻使用的个体内变化,以及相关的心理社会预测因素。
我们分析了一项为期 2 年、5 个波次的纵向研究(2018-2020 年)中 3006 名年轻人的数据(M=24.56[SD=4.72],54.8%为女性,31.6%为性少数群体,60.2%为种族/族裔少数群体)。潜增长模型分析了所有参与者在第 1 波至第 5 波期间过去 6 个月内吸烟、电子烟、传统雪茄、小雪茄/雪茄、无烟烟草(SLT)、水烟和大麻的使用情况;心理社会预测因素包括抑郁症状、不良童年经历(ACEs)和人格特质。
结果表明,随着时间的推移,每种烟草产品的使用可能性都有所下降,但大麻使用的可能性没有显著变化。各产品基线使用的心理社会预测因素包括抑郁症状和外向性,以及几乎所有产品的 ACEs 和开放性(例如,传统雪茄除外)。随着时间的推移,使用可能性下降较小的心理社会预测因素包括:香烟和传统雪茄的 ACEs;电子烟的外向性;小雪茄/雪茄的抑郁症状和外向性;SLT 的开放性;水烟的神经质(控制社会人口统计学因素)。随着时间的推移,使用可能性下降较大的预测因素包括:电子烟和水烟的尽责性;大麻的宜人性。
减少年轻人使用的干预措施可能针对使用不同产品(和组合)的不同风险/保护因素。此外,关于随着时间的推移,使用烟草产品的可能性降低而大麻的可能性增加的结果,需要在其他样本中进行复制和解释。