Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, School of Public Health, Brown University, United States.
Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, School of Public Health, Brown University, United States.
Addict Behav. 2022 Aug;131:107332. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107332. Epub 2022 Apr 9.
Black and Hispanic individuals in the US experience more socioeconomic adversities that are associated with disparities in tobacco use and cessation than White individuals. This study examined if racial/ethnic differences in smoking abstinence were mediated by socioeconomic (SES) adversities.
Data from 7,101 established smokers were identified in Wave 1 (2013-2014) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) and followed to Wave 4 (2016-2018). The study outcome was cigarette abstinence at Wave 4. The main independent variable was race/ethnicity (Non-Hispanic White [White], Non-Hispanic Black [Black] and Hispanic). The mediators were five measures of SES adversities (unemployment, poverty, difficulty with money, lower education level, lack of health insurance). A weighted Generalized Structural Equation Model (GSEM) was used to estimate the total, direct, and indirect effect of race/ethnicity on the odds of quitting mediated by the five SES adversities. This model was adjusted by study covariates, including health and smoking characteristics.
The indirect effect of race/ethnicity on cessation showed that differences in quitting between Black and White individuals as well as Hispanic and White individuals were mediated by SES adversities. However, the differences in quitting between Hispanic and Black individuals were not mediated by SES adversities. Black and Hispanic individuals were less likely to quit than White individuals, but Hispanic individuals were more likely to quit than Black individuals. There were no direct effects between Black or Hispanic individuals compared to White individuals. Those with higher SES were more likely to quit compared to those with lower SES.
Smoking abstinence is higher in White individuals compared to Black and Hispanic individuals and is mediated by SES adversities. However, smoking abstinence is higher among Hispanic individuals compared to Black individuals and it is not mediated by SES adversities. Future studies should consider the role of other factors, such as psychosocial support, racism, discrimination, and stress over the life course in explaining differences in smoking abstinence between Black and Hispanic individuals.
与白人相比,美国的黑人和西班牙裔个体经历了更多与社会经济不利因素相关的不平等现象,这些因素与烟草使用和戒烟方面的差异有关。本研究旨在检验种族/族裔差异是否通过社会经济地位(SES)不利因素对戒烟产生影响。
在人口烟草与健康评估(PATH)的第 1 波(2013-2014 年)中确定了 7101 名已建立的吸烟者的数据,并随访至第 4 波(2016-2018 年)。本研究的结局是第 4 波时的香烟戒烟率。主要自变量是种族/族裔(非西班牙裔白人[白人]、非西班牙裔黑人[黑人]和西班牙裔)。中介变量是 SES 不利因素的五个衡量标准(失业、贫困、资金困难、教育程度较低、缺乏健康保险)。使用加权广义结构方程模型(GSEM)来估计种族/族裔对通过五个 SES 不利因素进行戒烟的可能性的总、直接和间接影响。该模型通过研究协变量进行了调整,包括健康和吸烟特征。
种族/族裔对戒烟的间接影响表明,黑人与白人以及西班牙裔与白人之间的戒烟差异是由 SES 不利因素介导的。然而,西班牙裔与黑人之间的戒烟差异不受 SES 不利因素的影响。与白人相比,黑人或西班牙裔个体戒烟的可能性较低,但与黑人相比,西班牙裔个体戒烟的可能性较高。与白人相比,黑人或西班牙裔个体之间没有直接影响。SES 较高的人比 SES 较低的人更有可能戒烟。
与白人相比,黑人或西班牙裔个体的戒烟率较高,这是由 SES 不利因素介导的。然而,与黑人相比,西班牙裔个体的戒烟率更高,并且不受 SES 不利因素的影响。未来的研究应该考虑其他因素的作用,例如生活过程中的心理社会支持、种族主义、歧视和压力,以解释黑人和西班牙裔个体之间的戒烟差异。