UT Health Science Center at Houston, UT Health, School of Public Health in Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2023 Jan 5;25(2):254-260. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntac084.
In response to SARS-CoV2 (COVID-19), school districts incorporated remote learning as a mitigation strategy. This study examines the association between classroom setting (ie, on-campus versus remote) and e-cigarette susceptibility or ever use among a sample of Texas public middle school students.
Data from n = 985 students enrolled in the CATCH My Breath E-Cigarette Prevention Program trial were collected in Spring 2021. Participants were 6th-grade students in urban Texas. E-cigarette use was examined using the "at-risk" definition described by FDA, indicating either: (1) susceptible never user; or (2) experimental ever use. A multilevel, logistic regression model examined the association between classroom setting and e-cigarette susceptibility/ever use. Covariates included sex, race/ethnicity, academic achievement, household e-cigarette use, perceived school connectedness, and school-level economic status. Models account for nesting within school district. Analyses stratified by race/ethnicity were also conducted.
Overall, 36.3% of the sample were susceptible never users or ever e-cigarette users. The sample was comprised of 55.0% on-campus and 45.0% remote learners. On-campus learners had greater odds of reporting e-cigarette susceptibility or ever use (aOR: 1.45; p = .014). These findings were observed among Latino (aOR: 1.77; p = .026) and White (aOR: 2.10; p = .099) but not African American/Black (aOR: 0.86; p = .728) youth.
On-campus learning during the Spring 2021 semester was associated with greater risk for e-cigarette susceptibility or ever use among a diverse sample of 6th-grade students. E-cigarette susceptibility and ever use is a risk factor for progression to long-term e-cigarette use in later adolescence.
As school districts prepare to return to on-campus learning in 2022, a focused approach to e-cigarette prevention may be needed to prevent widespread e-cigarette initiation and continued use. Further, study findings demonstrate a need for further research on the school environment as a determinant of e-cigarette use.
为应对 SARS-CoV2(COVID-19),学区将远程学习作为一种缓解策略。本研究考察了课堂设置(即校内与远程)与德克萨斯州公立中学抽样学生中电子烟易感性或使用情况之间的关联。
数据来自参加 CATCH My Breath 电子烟预防计划试验的 985 名学生,于 2021 年春季收集。参与者为德克萨斯州城市地区的 6 年级学生。使用 FDA 描述的“易感性”定义来检查电子烟使用情况,这表明:(1)易感性未使用者;或(2)实验性曾使用者。使用多层逻辑回归模型检验课堂设置与电子烟易感性/使用情况之间的关联。协变量包括性别、种族/民族、学业成绩、家庭电子烟使用情况、感知的学校联系以及学校经济地位。模型考虑了学区内的嵌套关系。还进行了按种族/民族分层的分析。
总体而言,样本中有 36.3%为易感性未使用者或电子烟曾使用者。该样本由 55.0%的校内学习者和 45.0%的远程学习者组成。校内学习者报告电子烟易感性或使用情况的可能性更大(调整后的比值比:1.45;p =.014)。这些发现存在于拉丁裔(调整后的比值比:1.77;p =.026)和白人(调整后的比值比:2.10;p =.099)中,但在非裔美国人/黑人(调整后的比值比:0.86;p =.728)中没有。
2021 年春季学期的校内学习与多样化的 6 年级学生中电子烟易感性或使用情况增加有关。电子烟易感性和使用情况是以后青春期长期电子烟使用的风险因素。
随着学区准备在 2022 年恢复校内学习,可能需要采取有针对性的电子烟预防措施,以防止电子烟的广泛普及和持续使用。此外,研究结果表明,需要进一步研究学校环境作为电子烟使用的决定因素。