School of Medicine, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Israel.
Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 25;23(1):759. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15351-1.
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, reports about a possible protective effect of nicotine on COVID-19 conflicted with messaging by public health organizations about increased risks of COVID-19 due to smoking. The ambiguous information the public received, combined with COVID-19-induced anxiety, may have led to changes in tobacco or other nicotine product use. This study examined changes in use of combustible cigarettes (CCs), nargila (hookah/waterpipe), e-cigarettes, and IQOS and home-smoking behaviors. We also assessed COVID-19 related anxiety and perceptions regarding changes in risk of COVID-19 severity due to smoking.
We used cross-sectional data from a population telephone survey that was conducted in Israel in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic (May-June 2020) and included 420 adult (age 18+) individuals who reported having ever used CCs (n = 391), nargila (n = 193), and/or electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes)/heated tobacco products (e.g., IQOS) (n = 52). Respondents were asked about the effect that COVID-19 had on their nicotine product use (quit/reduced use, no change, increased use). We assessed changes in product use, risk perceptions, and anxiety using adjusted multinomial logistic regression analyses.
Most respondents did not change their frequency of product use (CCs: 81.0%, nargila: 88.2%, e-cigarettes/IQOS: 96.8%). A small percentage either decreased use (CCs: 7.2%, nargila: 3.2%, e-cigarettes/IQOS:2.4%) or increased use (CCs:11.8%, nargila:8.6%, e-cigarettes/IQOS:+ 0.9%). 55.6% of respondents used a product in the home prior to COVID-19; but during the first lockdown COVID-19 period, a greater percentage increased (12.6%) than decreased (4.0%) their home use. Higher levels of anxiety due to COVID-19 were associated with increased home smoking (aOR = 1.59, 95% CI:1.04-2.42, p = 0.02). Many respondents believed that increased severity of COVID-19 illness was associated with CCs (62.0%) and e-cigarettes/vaping (45.3%), with uncertainty about the association being lower for CCs (20.5%) than for vaping (41.3%).
While many respondents believed that nicotine product use (particularly CCs and e-cigarettes) was associated with increased risk of COVID-19 disease severity, the majority of users did not change their tobacco/nicotine use. The confusion about the relationship between tobacco use and COVID-19 calls for clear evidence-based messaging from governments. The association between home smoking and increased COVID-19-related stress suggests the need for campaigns and resources to prevent smoking in the home, particularly during times of stress.
在 COVID-19 大流行早期,有关尼古丁可能对 COVID-19 有保护作用的报告与公共卫生组织关于吸烟会增加 COVID-19 风险的信息相矛盾。公众收到的模棱两可的信息,加上 COVID-19 引起的焦虑,可能导致烟草或其他尼古丁产品使用的变化。本研究调查了可燃香烟(CC)、水烟(水烟袋/水烟管)、电子烟和 IQOS 的使用变化情况以及家庭吸烟行为。我们还评估了与 COVID-19 相关的焦虑以及对吸烟导致 COVID-19 严重程度增加的看法。
我们使用了在 COVID-19 大流行早期(2020 年 5 月至 6 月)在以色列进行的一项人口电话调查的横断面数据,该调查包括 420 名成年(18 岁以上)曾使用过可燃香烟(n=391)、水烟(n=193)和/或电子烟/加热烟草产品(如 IQOS)(n=52)的人。受访者被问及 COVID-19 对他们的尼古丁产品使用的影响(戒烟/减少使用、没有变化、增加使用)。我们使用调整后的多项逻辑回归分析评估了产品使用、风险认知和焦虑的变化。
大多数受访者没有改变他们的产品使用频率(可燃香烟:81.0%,水烟:88.2%,电子烟/IQOS:96.8%)。一小部分人要么减少使用(可燃香烟:7.2%,水烟:3.2%,电子烟/IQOS:2.4%),要么增加使用(可燃香烟:11.8%,水烟:8.6%,电子烟/IQOS:+0.9%)。55.6%的受访者在 COVID-19 之前在家中使用产品;但在 COVID-19 首次封锁期间,增加(12.6%)的比例高于减少(4.0%)的比例。由于 COVID-19 而产生的更高水平的焦虑与在家中吸烟增加(优势比[aOR]:1.59,95%置信区间[CI]:1.04-2.42,p=0.02)有关。许多受访者认为,CCs(62.0%)和电子烟/蒸气(45.3%)会增加 COVID-19 疾病的严重程度,而 CCs(20.5%)的不确定性低于蒸气(41.3%)。
虽然许多受访者认为尼古丁产品的使用(特别是 CCs 和电子烟)与 COVID-19 疾病严重程度增加有关,但大多数使用者并未改变他们的烟草/尼古丁使用。关于吸烟与 COVID-19 之间关系的混淆需要各国政府提供明确的基于证据的信息。在家中吸烟与 COVID-19 相关压力增加之间的关联表明,需要开展运动和提供资源,以防止在家中吸烟,尤其是在压力时期。