Zavala-Arciniega Luis, Meza Rafael, Hirschtick Jana L, Fleischer Nancy L
Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Integrative Oncology, BC Cancer Research Institute, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2023 Apr 6;25(5):908-917. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntac261.
Sociodemographic disparities in tobacco use are prevalent and persistent in the United States. Nevertheless, few studies have examined disparities in tobacco use from an intersectionality perspective. We developed a visualization tool to identify disparities in cigarette, e-cigarette, cigar, and smokeless tobacco use at the intersection of multiple social identities.
We used the 2018-2019 Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey (TUS-CPS) to estimate the prevalence of tobacco product use at the intersection of age (18-34, 35-54, ≥55 years), sex (male, female), race/ethnicity (Non-Hispanic [NH] White, NH Black, Hispanic, NH Other), and annual household income (<$50 000, $50 000-$99 999, and ≥$100 000). Estimates accounted for the complex survey design.
For cigarettes, the most defining characteristic was income, with the highest prevalence among low-income NH White male adults aged 35-54 years (30.7%) and low-income NH White female adults aged 35-54 years (29.7%). For e-cigarettes, the most defining characteristic was age, with adults 18-34 years old having the highest prevalence. High prevalence groups for cigars included young- and middle-aged NH Black and NH White males, while NH White males had the highest prevalence of smokeless tobacco use.
Our intersectionality visualization tool is helpful to uncover complex patterns of tobacco use, facilitating the identification of high-risk groups.
We created a visualization tool to identify disparities in cigarette, e-cigarette, cigar, and smokeless tobacco use at the intersection of age, sex, race/ethnicity, and income. Our visualization tool helps uncover complex patterns of tobacco use, facilitating the identification of high-risk population groups that would otherwise be masked. These results can be used to implement tobacco control policies targeted at factors that promote or sustain tobacco use disparities.
在美国,烟草使用方面的社会人口学差异普遍存在且持续存在。然而,很少有研究从交叉性视角审视烟草使用方面的差异。我们开发了一种可视化工具,以识别在多种社会身份交叉点上香烟、电子烟、雪茄和无烟烟草使用方面的差异。
我们使用2018 - 2019年《当前人口调查烟草使用补充调查》(TUS - CPS)来估计在年龄(18 - 34岁、35 - 54岁、≥55岁)、性别(男性、女性)、种族/族裔(非西班牙裔[NH]白人、NH黑人、西班牙裔、NH其他)和家庭年收入(<$50000、$50000 - $99999、≥$100000)交叉点上烟草制品使用的流行率。估计值考虑了复杂的调查设计。
对于香烟,最具决定性的特征是收入,在35 - 54岁的低收入NH白人男性成年人(30.7%)和35 - 54岁的低收入NH白人女性成年人(29.7%)中流行率最高。对于电子烟,最具决定性的特征是年龄,18 - 34岁的成年人流行率最高。雪茄的高流行率群体包括中青年NH黑人和NH白人男性,而NH白人男性无烟烟草使用的流行率最高。
我们的交叉性可视化工具有助于揭示烟草使用的复杂模式,便于识别高危群体。
我们创建了一种可视化工具,以识别在年龄、性别、种族/族裔和收入交叉点上香烟、电子烟、雪茄和无烟烟草使用方面的差异。我们的可视化工具有助于揭示烟草使用的复杂模式,便于识别那些可能会被掩盖的高危人群群体。这些结果可用于实施针对促进或维持烟草使用差异的因素的烟草控制政策。