Vogel Erin A, Romm Katelyn F, Berg Carla J
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 Rep. 2024 Nov 23;20:100571. doi: 10.1016/j.abrep.2024.100571. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Sexual minority young adults (SMYAs) display higher rates of polysubstance use (i.e., current use of multiple substances) than their heterosexual peers, but limited research has explored differences by gender and specific sexual identity.
Latent class analyses (LCAs) examined past-month use of combustible tobacco (i.e., cigarettes, cigars, hookah), e-cigarettes, cannabis, and alcohol among 2,343 YAs ( = 24.69, SD = 4.70; 57.4 % women, 42.6 % men; 18.0 % bisexual, 9.4 % gay or lesbian; 36.2% racial/ethnic minority) residing in 6 US metropolitan areas. Multinomial logistic regressions examined associations among sexual identity (bisexual, gay/lesbian, heterosexual) and polysubstance use classes among women ( = 1,345) and men ( = 998), separately.
LCA yielded a 5-class solution: primarily-alcohol use (29.5%), polysubstance use (i.e., use of all 4 substances, 24.3%), non-use (18.1%), cannabis and alcohol co-use (16.3%), and e-cigarette, cannabis, and alcohol co-use (11.8%). Bisexual and lesbian (vs. heterosexual) women displayed lower odds of primarily-alcohol use, whereas bisexual (vs. heterosexual) women displayed higher odds of polysubstance use, as well as e-cigarette, cannabis, and alcohol co-use. Bisexual (vs. heterosexual) men displayed lower odds of primarily-alcohol use, whereas gay (vs. heterosexual) men displayed lower odds of polysubstance use, as well as e-cigarette, cannabis, and alcohol co-use.
Bisexual women were at greatest risk for polysubstance use of combustible tobacco, e-cigarettes, cannabis, and alcohol, whereas bisexual and gay men were at lower risk than heterosexual men for polysubstance use. Results underscore the need for tailored interventions and campaigns to consider patterns of co-occurring tobacco, cannabis, and alcohol use, particularly for bisexual women.
性少数青年成年人(SMYAs)使用多种物质(即当前使用多种物质)的比例高于异性恋同龄人,但针对性别和特定性取向差异的研究有限。
潜在类别分析(LCA)研究了居住在美国6个大都市地区的2343名青年成年人(平均年龄=24.69,标准差=4.70;57.4%为女性,42.6%为男性;18.0%为双性恋,9.4%为男同性恋或女同性恋;36.2%为少数种族/族裔)过去一个月内可燃烟草(即香烟、雪茄、水烟)、电子烟、大麻和酒精的使用情况。多项逻辑回归分别研究了女性(n=1345)和男性(n=998)中性取向(双性恋、男同性恋/女同性恋、异性恋)与多种物质使用类别之间的关联。
LCA得出了一个5类解决方案:主要使用酒精(29.5%)、使用多种物质(即使用所有4种物质,24.3%)、不使用(18.1%)、大麻和酒精共同使用(16.3%)以及电子烟、大麻和酒精共同使用(11.8%)。双性恋和女同性恋(与异性恋相比)女性主要使用酒精的几率较低,而双性恋(与异性恋相比)女性使用多种物质以及电子烟、大麻和酒精共同使用的几率较高。双性恋(与异性恋相比)男性主要使用酒精的几率较低,而男同性恋(与异性恋相比)男性使用多种物质以及电子烟、大麻和酒精共同使用的几率较低。
双性恋女性使用可燃烟草、电子烟、大麻和酒精等多种物质的风险最大,而双性恋和男同性恋使用多种物质的风险低于异性恋男性。结果强调需要制定针对性的干预措施和宣传活动,以考虑烟草、大麻和酒精同时使用的模式,特别是针对双性恋女性。