Assari Shervin, Najand Babak, Sheikhattari Payam
Department of Internal Medicine, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Department of Family Medicine, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
J Med Surg Public Health. 2024 Apr;2. doi: 10.1016/j.glmedi.2024.100063. Epub 2024 Feb 2.
Household income, a prominent socioeconomic status (SES) indicator, is known to mitigate youth engagement in various health risk behaviors, including tobacco use. Nevertheless, the Minorities' Diminished Returns theory suggests that this protective effect may be less pronounced for racial and ethnic minorities compared to majority groups. This study aimed to investigate the protective role of high household income against tobacco use among youth and explore potential variations across different racial and ethnic groups.
Conducted as a longitudinal analysis, this study utilized data from the initial three years of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study spanning 2016-2022. The cohort consisted of 11,875 American youth aged 9-10 years, tracked over a three-year period. The dependent variable was tobacco initiation, irrespective of the product, while household income served as the independent variable. Covariates included youth age, gender, family education, structure, and employment, with race/ethnicity acting as the moderating variable.
Out of the 8,754 American youth who were non-smokers at baseline, 3.1% (n = 269) initiated tobacco use during the 30-month follow-up, while 96.9% (n = 8,485) remained non-smokers. A family income exceeding $100,000 per year was associated with a lower hazard ratio for tobacco initiation (transitioning to ever-use) over the follow-up period (HR = 0.620, p = 0.022). However, household income of $50-100k exhibited significant interactions with race/ethnicity on tobacco initiation, indicating weaker protective effects for Black (HR for interaction = 7.860, p < 0.001) and Latino (HR for interaction = 3.461, p = 0.001) youth compared to non-Latino White youth.
Within the United States, the racialization and minoritization of youth diminish the protective effects of economic resources, such as high household income, against the transition to tobacco use. Non-Latino White youth, the most socially privileged group, experience greater protection from their elevated household income regarding tobacco initiation compared to Black and Latino youth, who face minoritization and racialization. Policymakers should address not only the SES gap but also the mechanisms contributing to the heightened risk of tobacco use among racialized and minoritized youth from affluent backgrounds.
家庭收入作为一个重要的社会经济地位(SES)指标,已知能减少青少年参与各种健康风险行为,包括吸烟。然而,少数群体收益递减理论表明,与多数群体相比,这种保护作用对种族和族裔少数群体可能不那么明显。本研究旨在调查高家庭收入对青少年吸烟的保护作用,并探讨不同种族和族裔群体之间的潜在差异。
本研究采用纵向分析,利用了2016 - 2022年青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究最初三年的数据。该队列由11875名9 - 10岁的美国青少年组成,跟踪了三年时间。因变量是吸烟起始情况,不考虑产品类型,而家庭收入作为自变量。协变量包括青少年年龄、性别、家庭教育、家庭结构和就业情况,种族/族裔作为调节变量。
在基线时不吸烟的8754名美国青少年中,3.1%(n = 269)在30个月的随访期间开始吸烟,而96.9%(n = 8485)仍然不吸烟。家庭年收入超过10万美元与随访期间吸烟起始(转变为经常吸烟)的较低风险比相关(风险比 = 0.620,p = 0.022)。然而,5万至10万美元的家庭收入在吸烟起始方面与种族/族裔存在显著交互作用,表明与非拉丁裔白人青少年相比,黑人(交互作用风险比 = 7.860,p < 0.001)和拉丁裔(交互作用风险比 = 3.461,p = 0.001)青少年的保护作用较弱。
在美国,青少年的种族化和少数群体化削弱了经济资源(如高家庭收入)对吸烟转变的保护作用。非拉丁裔白人青少年作为社会地位最优越的群体,与面临少数群体化和种族化的黑人和拉丁裔青少年相比,从其较高的家庭收入中获得了更大的吸烟起始保护。政策制定者不仅应解决社会经济地位差距,还应关注导致富裕背景下种族化和少数群体化青少年吸烟风险增加的机制。