College of Social Work, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Sep 17;19(18):11726. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191811726.
A crisis of worsening youth mental health in recent years across the United States has created alarm among health professionals. As a result, health professionals have sought to improve methods of identifying youth in need of treatment services. Cigarette, cannabis, and alcohol use each consistently serve as behavioral markers of risk for youth mental health problems. Despite the recent growth of electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use among youth, few studies have examined whether e-cigarettes follow the same associational pattern with mental health problems in the context of other substance use. Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic may have altered the associations between youth substance use and mental health problems due to both reduced overall use and increased mental health problems after the onset of the pandemic. The current study examined associations between youth substance use and psychological distress before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic using two state-representative samples of youth in grades 8, 10, and 12 from 2019 (N = 58,689) and 2021 (N = 46,823) from Utah. Pooled cross-sectional linear and negative binomial regression models clustered by grade, stratified by school district, and weighted to represent population characteristics estimated associations between recent e-cigarette, combustible cigarette, cannabis, and heavy alcohol use and two measures of psychological distress-depressive symptoms and mental health treatment needs. After controlling for sociodemographic factors and recent uses of other substances, results indicated that psychological distress increased from 2019 to 2021 and that recent e-cigarette, combustible cigarette, cannabis, and heavy alcohol use were each significantly associated with increased levels on both measures of psychological distress. Compared to other substances, e-cigarette use showed the strongest standardized associations. The association of e-cigarette use with depressive symptoms strengthened significantly from 2019 to 2021. Given the youth mental health crisis paired with the widespread adoption of e-cigarettes, health professionals should consider recent e-cigarette use an increasingly important behavioral marker for risks of mental health problems among youth. Results suggest that future research studies examining the temporal ordering of substance use and mental health among youth should include e-cigarettes.
近年来,美国青少年心理健康状况不断恶化,这在医疗专业人员中引起了警觉。因此,医疗专业人员一直在寻求改进识别需要治疗服务的青少年的方法。吸烟、吸食大麻和饮酒是青少年心理健康问题风险的行为标志。尽管最近青少年电子烟(电子烟)的使用有所增加,但很少有研究调查电子烟在其他物质使用的背景下是否与心理健康问题具有相同的关联模式。此外,由于大流行后整体使用量减少和心理健康问题增加,COVID-19 大流行可能改变了青少年物质使用与心理健康问题之间的关联。本研究使用来自犹他州 2019 年(N=58689)和 2021 年(N=46823)的两个具有代表性的 8、10 和 12 年级青少年样本,在 COVID-19 大流行前后,使用横断面线性和负二项回归模型,按年级进行聚类,按学区分层,并加权以代表人口特征,估计最近电子烟、可燃香烟、大麻和大量饮酒与两种心理健康困扰指标(抑郁症状和心理健康治疗需求)之间的关联。在控制了社会人口因素和最近使用其他物质的情况后,结果表明,从 2019 年到 2021 年,心理健康困扰增加,最近电子烟、可燃香烟、大麻和大量饮酒与两种心理健康困扰指标的水平增加均显著相关。与其他物质相比,电子烟的使用与标准化关联最强。从 2019 年到 2021 年,电子烟使用与抑郁症状的关联显著增强。鉴于青少年心理健康危机与电子烟的广泛采用并存,医疗专业人员应将最近电子烟的使用视为青少年心理健康问题风险的一个越来越重要的行为标志。结果表明,未来研究青少年物质使用和心理健康之间的时间顺序的研究应该包括电子烟。