Lee Juhan, Winickoff Jonathan P, Tan Andy S L
Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
Division of General Academic Pediatrics, Massachusetts General for Children, Boston, Massachusetts, and Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
AJPM Focus. 2025 Mar 29;4(3):100340. doi: 10.1016/j.focus.2025.100340. eCollection 2025 Jun.
E-cigarettes are commonly used tobacco products by young adults, including sexual minority individuals and racial/ethnic marginalized individuals. This study examines the prevalence of e-cigarette use at the intersections of sexual identity and race/ethnicity among U.S. young adults because of previous research indicating high levels of e-cigarette use among the sexual minority youth of color.
This study used the public adult dataset from Wave 6 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study (2021) and included young adults aged 18-24 years (N=10,633). The association between past-30-day e-cigarette use (yes, no), sexual identity (straight/heterosexual, gay/lesbian/bisexual/something else [LGB+]), race (White, Black, others), ethnicity (non-Hispanic, Hispanic), interactions between sexual identity and race, and interactions between sexual identity and ethnicity were analyzed, using adjusted binomial logistic regressions. These analyses were further stratified by sex and presented as adjusted predicted margins.
The analysis showed that the adjusted predicted margin of past-30-day e-cigarette use between heterosexual versus LGB+ Black young adult females (4% versus 12%) is significantly different, while predicted margins between heterosexual versus LGB+ Black young adult males are not significantly different. There were no significant interactions between sexual identity and ethnicity in predicting e-cigarette use.
This study highlights that LGB+ Black young adult females may be at increased risk for e-cigarette use than heterosexual Black young adult females. The findings call for research on the reasons for the heterogeneity of e-cigarette use according to sex, sexual identity, and race.
电子烟是年轻人常用的烟草制品,包括性少数群体和种族/族裔边缘化群体。由于此前的研究表明有色人种性少数青年中电子烟使用率较高,本研究调查了美国年轻人中性取向与种族/族裔交叉点上的电子烟使用流行情况。
本研究使用了烟草与健康人口评估(PATH)研究第6波(2021年)的公开成人数据集,纳入了18至24岁的年轻人(N = 10,633)。使用调整后的二项逻辑回归分析过去30天电子烟使用情况(是、否)、性取向(异性恋、同性恋/双性恋/其他性取向[LGB+])、种族(白人、黑人、其他)、族裔(非西班牙裔、西班牙裔)、性取向与种族之间的相互作用以及性取向与族裔之间的相互作用。这些分析进一步按性别分层,并以调整后的预测边际呈现。
分析表明,异性恋与LGB+黑人年轻成年女性过去30天电子烟使用的调整预测边际(4%对12%)有显著差异,而异性恋与LGB+黑人年轻成年男性之间的预测边际无显著差异。在预测电子烟使用方面,性取向与族裔之间没有显著的相互作用。
本研究强调,LGB+黑人年轻成年女性可能比异性恋黑人年轻成年女性有更高的电子烟使用风险。研究结果呼吁针对根据性别、性取向和种族使用电子烟的异质性原因展开研究。