Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Department of Social, Behavioral, and Population Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA.
J Subst Use Addict Treat. 2023 May;148:208958. doi: 10.1016/j.josat.2023.208958. Epub 2023 Jan 14.
Racial/ethnic discrimination (hereafter, discrimination) is associated with use of individual tobacco and cannabis products. However, we know little about how discrimination affects dual/polytobacco and cannabis use and associated use disorders.
We used cross-sectional data on adults (18+) from the 2012-2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (n = 35,744). We defined past-year discrimination as a summary scale (range: 0-24) based on six scenarios. We created a mutually exclusive six-category use variable: noncurrent, individual tobacco and noncannabis, individual tobacco and cannabis, individual cannabis and nontobacco, dual/polytobacco and noncannabis, and dual/polytobacco and cannabis based on past 30-day tobacco use of four products (i.e., cigarettes, electronic nicotine delivery systems, other combustibles (cigars, pipe), smokeless tobacco) and cannabis use. We also examined past-year tobacco use disorder (TUD) and cannabis use disorder (CUD) as a four-level variable: no disorders, TUD only, CUD only, and TUD and CUD. We estimated associations between discrimination and each outcome using adjusted multinomial logistic regression and assessed effect modification by stratifying adjusted models by race/ethnicity (i.e., Hispanic, non-Hispanic (NH) White, NH Black, and another race/ethnicity).
Experiencing more discrimination was associated with each outcome but was most strongly associated with dual/polytobacco and cannabis use (OR: 1.13, 95 % CI: 1.07-1.19) and joint TUD and CUD (OR: 1.16, 95 % CI: 1.12-1.20). Models stratified by race/ethnicity showed that discrimination was associated with dual/polytobacco and cannabis only among NH White adults, and with joint TUD and CUD only among NH Black and NH White adults.
Discrimination was associated with tobacco and cannabis use outcomes among multiple adult racial/ethnic populations, but associations were more profound for NH White and NH Black adults than adults from other racial/ethnic populations.
种族/民族歧视(以下简称歧视)与个体使用烟草和大麻产品有关。然而,我们对歧视如何影响双重/多烟草和大麻使用以及相关使用障碍知之甚少。
我们使用了 2012-2013 年国家酒精流行病学调查与相关条件 III(n=35744)成人(18 岁及以上)的横断面数据。我们根据六个情景定义了过去一年的歧视,即基于六个情景的综合量表(范围:0-24)。我们创建了一个相互排斥的六类使用变量:非当前、个体烟草和非大麻、个体烟草和大麻、个体大麻和非烟草、双重/多烟草和非大麻,以及基于过去 30 天四种产品(即香烟、电子尼古丁输送系统、其他可燃物(雪茄、烟斗)、无烟烟草)和大麻使用的双重/多烟草和大麻使用。我们还将过去一年的烟草使用障碍(TUD)和大麻使用障碍(CUD)作为一个四级变量进行了研究:无障碍、TUD 仅、CUD 仅、TUD 和 CUD。我们使用调整后的多项逻辑回归模型估计了歧视与每种结果之间的关联,并通过按种族/民族(即西班牙裔、非西班牙裔(NH)白人、NH 黑人以及其他种族/民族)分层调整后的模型来评估效应修饰。
经历更多的歧视与每种结果都有关,但与双重/多烟草和大麻使用(OR:1.13,95%CI:1.07-1.19)和联合 TUD 和 CUD(OR:1.16,95%CI:1.12-1.20)的关联最强。按种族/民族分层的模型表明,歧视仅与 NH 白人成年人的双重/多烟草和大麻使用有关,仅与 NH 黑人和 NH 白人成年人的联合 TUD 和 CUD 有关。
歧视与多种成年种族/民族群体的烟草和大麻使用结果有关,但 NH 白人和 NH 黑人群体的关联比其他种族/民族群体的关联更为明显。