Center for Health Promotion and Prevention Research, School of Public Health, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth), Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Human Genetics & Environmental Sciences, UTHealth Austin School of Public Health, Austin, TX 78701, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Jan 23;20(3):2078. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20032078.
Limited studies have examined disparities in e-cigarette use among Black/African American adults by sexual identity and whether the relationship between symptoms of anxiety/depression and e-cigarette use varies by sexual identity. We examined the association between e-cigarette use behaviors (never, former, and current use) and anxiety/depression among a nationally representative sample of Black/African American adults who identified as a sexual minority (lesbian/gay, bisexual, and others) or heterosexual individuals. We combined cross-sectional data from the 2011 to 2020 Health Information National Trends Survey (n = 6267), which is a nationally representative data set. We computed weighted e-cigarette use prevalence and multinomial logistic regression results (never use compared with former and current use, respectively). Among Blacks/African Americans, a larger percentage of sexual minority individuals compared with heterosexual individuals reported former and current e-cigarette use. Among sexual minorities, lesbian/gay individuals reported higher former e-cigarette use, whereas bisexual individuals reported higher current e-cigarette use. Among sexual minority individuals, moderate symptoms of anxiety/depression, compared with no symptoms of anxiety/depression, were associated with a higher likelihood of former e-cigarette use. Among heterosexuals, moderate symptoms of anxiety/depression were also associated with a higher likelihood of former e-cigarette use, while mild and severe symptoms of anxiety/depression were associated with current e-cigarette use compared with no symptoms of anxiety/depression. The intersection between sexual identity and anxiety/depression influenced e-cigarette use behaviors in different ways among Black/African Americans. The findings reinforce the heterogeneity within the Black/African American population, indicating the dangers of not considering subgroup differences as a standard part of public health research practice.
有限的研究考察了性身份对黑人和非裔美国成年人电子烟使用差异的影响,以及焦虑/抑郁症状与电子烟使用之间的关系是否因性身份而异。我们研究了在一个具有代表性的黑人和非裔美国成年人样本中,电子烟使用行为(从不、曾经和现在使用)与焦虑/抑郁之间的关联,这些成年人被认定为性少数群体(女同性恋/男同性恋、双性恋和其他人)或异性恋个体。我们合并了 2011 年至 2020 年健康信息国家趋势调查(n=6267)的横断面数据,这是一个具有代表性的全国性数据集。我们计算了加权电子烟使用的流行率和多项逻辑回归结果(与曾经使用和现在使用相比,从不使用)。在黑人/非裔美国人中,与异性恋者相比,性少数群体中报告曾经和现在使用电子烟的比例更高。在性少数群体中,女同性恋/男同性恋者报告了更高的曾经使用电子烟的比例,而双性恋者报告了更高的现在使用电子烟的比例。在性少数群体中,与没有焦虑/抑郁症状相比,中度焦虑/抑郁症状与曾经使用电子烟的可能性更高相关。在异性恋者中,中度焦虑/抑郁症状也与曾经使用电子烟的可能性更高相关,而轻度和重度焦虑/抑郁症状与没有焦虑/抑郁症状相比,与现在使用电子烟相关。性身份和焦虑/抑郁之间的交叉点以不同的方式影响黑人和非裔美国人的电子烟使用行为。这些发现强化了黑人和非裔美国人群体内部的异质性,表明在公共卫生研究实践中不考虑亚组差异作为标准部分的危险。