Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10010, USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, New York University School of Global Public Health, New York, NY, 10003, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 7;22(1):1138. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13470-9.
Cigarette smoking, secondhand cigarette smoke (SHS) exposure, and e-cigarette use ("vaping") are each associated with increased rates of depressive symptoms and other internalizing mental health disorders. The prevalence of vaping has increased greatly, yet the mental health correlates of secondhand exposure to e-cigarette emissions are as yet to be investigated. This study examined the potential adverse mental health outcomes associated with different tobacco exposures (direct and passive), with a particular focus on the mental health correlates of secondhand exposure to e-cigarette emissions.
The Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study data collected from a sample of 16,173 Wave 4 adults were used to test the hypothesis that secondhand e-cigarette emissions exposure is associated with increased odds of internalizing mental health disorders. Individuals were categorized as exclusive cigarette smokers, exclusive e-cigarette users, cigarette and e-cigarette dual users, exclusive noncombustible tobacco users, secondhand smoke exposed non-users, secondhand e-cigarette emissions exposed non-users, and non-users with no current SHS/secondhand e-cigarette aerosol exposure. Adjusted weighted logistic regression analysis was used to investigate the association between exposure type and internalizing problems as assessed by scores on the Global Appraisal of Individual Needs-Short Screener (GAIN-SS), a widely used instrument for assessing mental health problems.
Cigarette smokers (AOR = 2.53, 95% CI: 2.19-2.92), e-cigarette users (AOR = 3.14, 2.41-4.09), dual users (AOR = 3.37, 2.85-4.00), noncombustible tobacco users (AOR = 1.48, 1.01-2.17), SHS exposed non-users (AOR = 1.63, 1.37-1.94), and secondhand e-cigarette emissions exposed non-users (AOR = 1.43, 1.03-1.99) were each associated with increased odds of moderate to severe internalizing mental health problems as compared to unexposed non-users. Odds of internalizing problems among SHS and secondhand e-cigarette emissions exposed non-users did not differ (p = 0.46).
This is the first study, to our knowledge, to identify an association between recent secondhand exposure to e-cigarette emissions and mental health problems, and the risk is comparable to that of SHS. Corroboration of this relationship needs further research to explicate directionality and mechanisms underlying this association.
吸烟、二手烟暴露和电子烟使用(“ vaping”)均与抑郁症状和其他内化心理健康障碍的发生率增加有关。电子烟的使用日益普及,但电子烟排放的二手暴露与心理健康的相关性仍有待研究。本研究考察了不同烟草暴露(直接和被动)与潜在不良心理健康结果之间的关联,特别关注二手电子烟排放暴露与心理健康的相关性。
使用来自 16173 名 4 波成年人的人口评估烟草和健康研究数据,检验了二手电子烟排放暴露与内化心理健康障碍发生率增加相关的假设。将个体分为:仅吸烟、仅电子烟、香烟和电子烟双重使用者、仅非燃烧烟草使用者、二手烟暴露非使用者、二手电子烟排放暴露非使用者和无当前二手烟/二手电子烟气溶胶暴露的非使用者。使用加权逻辑回归分析调查了暴露类型与个体需求综合评估-短筛检器(GAIN-SS)评分评估的内化问题之间的关联,GAIN-SS 是一种广泛用于评估心理健康问题的工具。
吸烟者(OR=2.53,95%CI:2.19-2.92)、电子烟使用者(OR=3.14,2.41-4.09)、双重使用者(OR=3.37,2.85-4.00)、非燃烧烟草使用者(OR=1.48,1.01-2.17)、二手烟暴露非使用者(OR=1.63,1.37-1.94)和二手电子烟排放暴露非使用者(OR=1.43,1.03-1.99)与未暴露的非使用者相比,内化心理健康问题的中度至重度发生几率更高。二手烟和二手电子烟排放暴露的非使用者的内化问题发生率无差异(p=0.46)。
这是我们所知的首次研究,确定了最近二手电子烟排放暴露与心理健康问题之间的关联,风险与二手烟相当。需要进一步的研究来阐明这种关联的方向性和机制,以证实这种关系。