Branstetter Steven A, Muscast Joshua
Department of Biobehavioral Health, The Pennsylvania State University, 219 BBH Building, University Park, PA, 16802, USA.
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Public Health Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, 700 HMC Crescent Road, Hershey, PA, 17033, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 May 6. doi: 10.1007/s40615-025-02457-y.
Despite a reduction in overall cigarette smoking rates in the last several decades, recent increases in the use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS), such as e-cigarettes and Juul devices, prompted the Surgeon General to declare the use of such products to be an "epidemic." Along with the increase in the overall incidence of ENDS use, there are corresponding disparities in initiation, attitudes, and use patterns among Latinx populations. The present study sought to examine how elements of several behavioral theories, including parent, peer, media and environmental factors, are associated with a comprehensive measure of ENDS use susceptibility among both Latinx and non- Latinx youth.
Data from 9630 adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 years were collected in wave 3 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH). Data were used to create and test a covariance structural path model examining the effects of parental modeling, communication, attitudes, rule-setting, and peer perceptions on ENDS use susceptibility. Multigroup model comparisons between Latinx and non-Latinx youth were completed.
Despite non-Latinx youth having more risk factors associated with ENDS use susceptibility, including parental ENDS use, more lenient rules regarding ENDS use in the home, and less perceived harm from ENDS use, Latinx youth had higher overall susceptibility. Additionally, despite predictions from prior research and theory, perceived social norms regarding ENDS use were not associated with susceptibility among non-Latinx youth. Parental ENDS use and having ENDS products available in the home were associated with greater susceptibility in Latinx, but not non-Latinx youth.
Key differences in ENDS susceptibility between Latinx and non-Latinx youth warrant both further investigation and increased culturally tailored prevention programming.
尽管在过去几十年中总体吸烟率有所下降,但最近电子烟等电子尼古丁传送系统(ENDS)的使用有所增加,促使卫生局局长宣布使用此类产品已成为一种“流行病”。随着ENDS使用总体发生率的上升,拉丁裔人群在开始使用、态度和使用模式方面存在相应差异。本研究旨在探讨包括父母、同伴、媒体和环境因素在内的几种行为理论的要素如何与拉丁裔和非拉丁裔青少年对ENDS使用易感性的综合测量相关联。
在烟草与健康人口评估(PATH)的第3波中收集了9630名12至17岁青少年的数据。这些数据用于创建和测试一个协方差结构路径模型,以检验父母示范、沟通、态度、规则设定和同伴认知对ENDS使用易感性的影响。完成了拉丁裔和非拉丁裔青少年之间的多组模型比较。
尽管非拉丁裔青少年有更多与ENDS使用易感性相关的风险因素,包括父母使用ENDS、家中对ENDS使用的规定更宽松以及对ENDS使用的危害认知较低,但拉丁裔青少年的总体易感性更高。此外,尽管先前的研究和理论有预测,但非拉丁裔青少年对ENDS使用的感知社会规范与易感性无关。父母使用ENDS以及家中有ENDS产品与拉丁裔青少年更高的易感性相关,但与非拉丁裔青少年无关。
拉丁裔和非拉丁裔青少年在ENDS易感性方面的关键差异值得进一步研究,并加强针对不同文化背景的预防计划。