Vermont Center on Behavior & Health, Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, United States of America.
Vermont Center on Behavior & Health, Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, United States of America.
Prev Med. 2024 Aug;185:108024. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2024.108024. Epub 2024 Jun 6.
A growing number of adults use more than one tobacco product, with dual use of cigarettes and e-cigarettes being the most common combination. Monitoring sex disparities in tobacco use is a public health priority. However, little is known regarding whether dual users differ by sex.
Data came from Waves 4-6 (12/2016-11/2021) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study, a US nationally-representative longitudinal survey. This analysis included current adult dual users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes. We used weighted generalized estimating equations to assess the association between sex and (1) making a cigarette quit attempt (n = 1882 observations from n = 1526 individuals) and (2) smoking cessation (n = 2081 observations from n = 1688 individuals) across two wave pairs, adjusting for age, education, ethnicity, time-to-first cigarette after waking, and e-cigarette use frequency.
Among US dual users, 14.1% (95% Confidence Intervals [Cl] = 11.9-16.4) of females and 23.4% (20.0-26.9) of males were young adults (aged 18-24), 11.7% (9.2-14.2) of females and 14.4% (11.6-17.2) of males had <high school education, and 82.2% (79.4-84.5) of females and 78.7% (75.1-82.4) of males were white. Overall, 44.9% (41.6-48.1) of females compared with 37.4% (33.5-41.3) of males made an attempt to quit smoking between a baseline and follow-up wave (Adjusted Risk Ratio [ARR] = 1.23, 1.05-1.45). In contrast, there were no apparent differences between females (22.1%, 19.0-25.2) and males (24.3%, 21.5-27.1) in smoking cessation (ARR = 1.06, 0.84-1.35).
US females who dual use e-cigarettes and cigarettes were more likely to attempt to quit smoking, but not more likely to succeed at quitting, than males.
越来越多的成年人使用不止一种烟草制品,其中最常见的组合是同时使用香烟和电子烟。监测烟草使用方面的性别差异是公共卫生的重点。然而,对于双重使用者是否存在性别差异,我们知之甚少。
数据来自美国全国代表性纵向调查——人口评估烟草与健康研究的第 4-6 波(2016 年 12 月至 2021 年 11 月)。本分析包括当前同时使用香烟和电子烟的成年双重使用者。我们使用加权广义估计方程来评估性别与(1)尝试戒烟(n=1526 人中有 1882 次观察)和(2)戒烟(n=1688 人中有 2081 次观察)之间的关联,调整了年龄、教育程度、种族、醒来后第一支烟的时间和电子烟使用频率。
在美国的双重使用者中,14.1%(95%置信区间 [Cl]为 11.9-16.4)的女性和 23.4%(20.0-26.9)的男性为年轻人(18-24 岁),11.7%(9.2-14.2)的女性和 14.4%(11.6-17.2)的男性受教育程度低于高中,82.2%(79.4-84.5)的女性和 78.7%(75.1-82.4)的男性为白人。总体而言,与男性(44.9%,41.6-48.1)相比,女性(37.4%,33.5-41.3)更有可能在基线和随访波之间尝试戒烟(调整后的风险比 [ARR]为 1.23,1.05-1.45)。相比之下,女性(22.1%,19.0-25.2)和男性(24.3%,21.5-27.1)在戒烟方面没有明显差异(ARR 为 1.06,0.84-1.35)。
与男性相比,同时使用电子烟和香烟的美国女性更有可能尝试戒烟,但戒烟成功的可能性没有更大。