Department of Primary care and Public Health, Imperial College London School of Public Health, London, UK
Department of Primary care and Public Health, Imperial College London School of Public Health, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Mar 28;14(3):e080818. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080818.
The majority of tobacco users have had their first contact with nicotine at a young age. The aim of this study was to explore the association between the first tobacco or nicotine product tried and the transition to regular product use in 28 European countries.
A secondary analysis of participants aged 15-40 years (n=8884) from 28 countries was conducted (Eurobarometer wave 93.2; August-September 2020). Participants who reported having ever tried tobacco or nicotine products were asked which product they tried first. Self-reported history of tobacco use determined whether they were established users (≥1 time weekly) of a range of products at any point in their life. Multilevel logistic regression was used to measure the association between first product tried and becoming a regular user of tobacco or nicotine products.
There was large variation between countries in the proportion of participants aged ≤40 years that ever tried tobacco or nicotine; Estonia had the highest proportion of ever users (85.8%) and Poland had the lowest (38.9%). Among those who had ever tried tobacco or nicotine, boxed cigarettes were the most common first product (72.3%) and pipe was the least common (0.4%). Compared with those who first tried e-cigarettes, the odds of ever becoming a regular user of any tobacco or nicotine product were higher among those who first had hand-rolled cigarettes (adjusted OR, aOR 2.23; 95% CI 1.43 to 3.48) or boxed cigarettes (aOR 2.08; 95% CI1.43 to 3.02) and lower among those who first tried waterpipe (aOR 0.22; 95% CI 0.14 to 0.34).
Although this study cannot infer causality, the findings show that odds of becoming a regular tobacco user differs widely depending on the first product used. Better understanding of the associations between first product use and regular tobacco use could be informative to tobacco control policy-makers and help tailor prevention programmes.
大多数烟民在年轻时首次接触尼古丁。本研究旨在探讨 28 个欧洲国家中首次尝试的烟草或尼古丁产品与过渡到常规产品使用之间的关联。
对 28 个国家中年龄在 15-40 岁的参与者(n=8884)进行了二次分析(欧洲民意调查第 93.2 波;2020 年 8 月至 9 月)。报告曾经尝试过烟草或尼古丁产品的参与者被问及他们首先尝试了哪种产品。自我报告的烟草使用史确定了他们在一生中的任何时候是否是一系列产品的固定使用者(每周≥1 次)。多水平逻辑回归用于衡量首次尝试的产品与成为烟草或尼古丁产品的常规使用者之间的关联。
在≤40 岁的参与者中,曾经尝试过烟草或尼古丁的比例在国家之间存在很大差异;爱沙尼亚的曾用率最高(85.8%),波兰的最低(38.9%)。在曾经尝试过烟草或尼古丁的人中,盒装香烟是最常见的首次尝试产品(72.3%),烟斗是最不常见的(0.4%)。与首次尝试电子烟的人相比,首次尝试手卷烟(调整后的比值比,aOR 2.23;95%可信区间 1.43 至 3.48)或盒装香烟(aOR 2.08;95%可信区间 1.43 至 3.02)的人成为任何烟草或尼古丁产品的常规使用者的几率更高,而首次尝试水烟的人(aOR 0.22;95%可信区间 0.14 至 0.34)的几率更低。
尽管这项研究不能推断因果关系,但研究结果表明,成为常规烟草使用者的几率因首次使用的产品而异。更好地了解首次使用产品与常规烟草使用之间的关联,可能为烟草控制政策制定者提供信息,并有助于针对预防计划进行调整。