Irvine Dylan S, Lee Eun-Young, Janssen Ian, Leatherdale Scott T
Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences, Queen's University, 28 Division St, Kingston, ON K7L3N6, Canada.
School of Kinesiology and Health Studies, Queen's University, 28 Division St, Kingston, ON K7L3N6, Canada.
Dialogues Health. 2022 Jul 11;1:100029. doi: 10.1016/j.dialog.2022.100029. eCollection 2022 Dec.
To examine associations between e-cigarette use, cigarette smoking, physical activity, and sedentary behaviour among a large sample of Canadian adolescents (Grades 9-12) by sex.
Cross-sectional data from 55,629 students who participated in COMPASS Year 6 (2017-2018) were used. Exposures included e-cigarette use and cigarette smoking. Outcomes included meeting recommendations for moderate- to vigorous- physical activity (MVPA;≥60 min/d), muscular strengthening exercises (MSE;≥3 time/wk), and recreational screen time (ST;≤2 h/day) and participating in intramurals or competitive team sports. Logistic regressions were performed after adjusting for relevant covariates.
Male adolescents showed higher prevalence of e-cigarette use (40.0% vs 31.3%) and cigarette smoking (4.4% vs 2.9%) than females. Both males and females who used e-cigarettes were more likely to meet MVPA and MSE recommendations, but less likely to meet the ST recommendation than those who did not use e-cigarettes. E-cigarette use was also consistently associated with more sport participation in males, however, among females the results were mixed. Current cigarette use was associated with meeting the MVPA recommendation and less participation in intramurals in males; however, in females, current cigarette smoking was consistently associated with less participation in any sports. Former cigarette use was associated with participation in competitive team sport within school and meeting the MSE recommendation in females only.
This study found that associations between e-cigarette use and cigarette smoking with physical activity, sedentary behaviour, and sport participation are largely gendered. Identifying differential co-occurrence of risk behaviours by gender is important for future health promotion efforts targeting physical activity among adolescents.
按性别考察加拿大大量青少年(9至12年级)中电子烟使用、吸烟、身体活动和久坐行为之间的关联。
使用了来自参与COMPASS第6年(2017 - 2018年)的55629名学生的横断面数据。暴露因素包括电子烟使用和吸烟。结果包括达到中度至剧烈身体活动(MVPA;≥60分钟/天)、肌肉强化锻炼(MSE;≥3次/周)以及娱乐性屏幕时间(ST;≤2小时/天)的建议,以及参加校内或竞技团队运动。在对相关协变量进行调整后进行逻辑回归分析。
男性青少年的电子烟使用率(40.0%对31.3%)和吸烟率(4.4%对2.9%)高于女性。使用电子烟的男性和女性都更有可能达到MVPA和MSE建议,但与不使用电子烟的人相比,达到ST建议的可能性较小。电子烟使用也一直与男性更多地参与体育运动相关,然而,在女性中结果不一。当前吸烟与男性达到MVPA建议以及较少参与校内运动相关;然而,在女性中,当前吸烟一直与较少参与任何体育运动相关。仅在女性中,曾经吸烟与参与校内竞技团队运动以及达到MSE建议相关。
本研究发现,电子烟使用和吸烟与身体活动、久坐行为和运动参与之间的关联在很大程度上存在性别差异。识别按性别划分的风险行为的不同共现情况对于未来针对青少年身体活动的健康促进努力很重要。