TSET Health Promotion Research Center, Stephenson Cancer Center, Univeristy of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA; Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA.
TSET Health Promotion Research Center, Stephenson Cancer Center, Univeristy of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA; Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA.
Addict Behav. 2023 Oct;145:107763. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2023.107763. Epub 2023 Jun 4.
Limited research has examined differences in cigarette/e-cigarette use trajectories among specific subgroups of sexual minority (SM) young adult (SMYA) men and women.
Repeated measures latent profile analyses (RMLPAs) examined past 6-month cigarette and e-cigarette use trajectories across 5 waves of data (2018-2020) among men (n = 1235; M = 25.56, SD = 4.85; 8.0% bisexual, 12.7% gay; 36.4% racial/ethnic minority) and women (n = 1574; M = 24.64, SD = 4.72; 23.8% bisexual, 5.9% lesbian; 35.3% racial/ethnic minority) residing in 6 US metropolitan statistical areas. Multinomial logistic regressions examined associations among sexual orientation (bisexual, gay/lesbian, heterosexual) and tobacco use trajectories among men and women, separately.
RMLPAs yielded a 6-profile solution: stable low-level cigarette and e-cigarette use (66.6%), stable low-level cigarette and high-level e-cigarette use (12.2%), stable low-level cigarette and decreasing e-cigarette use (6.2%), stable mid-level cigarette and low-level e-cigarette use (6.2%), stable high-level cigarette and low-level e-cigarette use (4.5%), and stable high-level cigarette and e-cigarette use (4.2%). Gay (vs. heterosexual) men were less likely to display stable low-level cigarette and stable high-level e-cigarette use. Bisexual (vs. heterosexual) women were more likely to display stable low-level cigarette and stable high-level e-cigarette use, stable low-level cigarette and decreasing high-level e-cigarette use, and stable high-level cigarette and stable low-level e-cigarette use.
Bisexual women were at greatest risk for displaying several problematic cigarette and e-cigarette use trajectories, whereas few differences emerged for men. Tailored interventions and campaigns are needed to curtail ongoing tobacco use disparities among SMYA men and women, particularly bisexual women.
有限的研究考察了特定性少数群体(SM)年轻成年人(SMYA)男性和女性亚组之间香烟/电子烟使用轨迹的差异。
重复测量潜在剖面分析(RMLPA)使用 5 波数据(2018-2020 年),对男性(n=1235;M=25.56,SD=4.85;8.0%双性恋,12.7%同性恋;36.4%少数族裔)和女性(n=1574;M=24.64,SD=4.72;23.8%双性恋,5.9%女同性恋;35.3%少数族裔)过去 6 个月的香烟和电子烟使用轨迹进行了分析。多项逻辑回归分别检验了男性和女性的性取向(双性恋、同性恋/女同性恋、异性恋)与烟草使用轨迹之间的关联。
RMLPA 产生了 6 个特征曲线解决方案:稳定的低水平香烟和电子烟使用(66.6%)、稳定的低水平香烟和高水平电子烟使用(12.2%)、稳定的低水平香烟和电子烟使用减少(6.2%)、稳定的中低水平香烟和低水平电子烟使用(6.2%)、稳定的高水平香烟和低水平电子烟使用(4.5%)以及稳定的高水平香烟和电子烟使用(4.2%)。与异性恋男性相比,同性恋男性不太可能显示出稳定的低水平香烟和稳定的高水平电子烟使用。与异性恋女性相比,双性恋女性更有可能显示出稳定的低水平香烟和稳定的高水平电子烟使用、稳定的低水平香烟和高水平电子烟使用减少以及稳定的高水平香烟和稳定的低水平电子烟使用。
双性恋女性显示出几种有问题的香烟和电子烟使用轨迹的风险最高,而男性几乎没有差异。需要针对 SMYA 男性和女性,特别是双性恋女性,制定有针对性的干预和宣传活动,以遏制持续存在的烟草使用差距。