학술논문

Longitudinal transitions in adolescent polytobacco use across waves 1–4 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Addiction. Apr2023, Vol. 118 Issue 4, p727-738. 12p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*ELECTRONIC cigarettes
*HISPANIC Americans
*SMOKELESS tobacco
*ADOLESCENT health
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*TOBACCO products
*SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors
*LOGISTIC regression analysis
*SMOKING
*LONGITUDINAL method
*ADOLESCENCE
Language
ISSN
0965-2140
Abstract
Aims: This study aims to identify adolescent patterns of polytobacco use and measure transitions between patterns over time. Design: Longitudinal analysis using data derived from waves 1–4 (2013–18) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study. Transitions in tobacco use patterns were examined via latent transition analysis, and then, socio‐demographic characteristics were used to predict transitions via logistic regression. Setting: United States. Participants: Participants included 975 adolescents who used at least one tobacco product at any wave (W1 mean age = 13.29, standard deviation = 0.86; W4 54.2% male; 54.5% white, 25.9% Hispanic). Measurements Measurements included past 30‐day use of cigarettes, electronic cigarettes (e‐cigs), traditional cigars, cigarillos, filtered cigars, snus, smokeless tobacco (SLT) or hookah. Findings Six latent classes were identified. Cigarette users (43.5–58.8%) and SLT users (50.8–79.6%) tended to persist in their use over time. E‐cig users began to probably transition to non‐users (80.0%), but became more likely to persist in this use over time (31.1%). Non‐users at a given wave were most likely to transition to e‐cig users (8.5–43.7%) or cigarette users (6.7–28.6%). Cigarillo/poly‐users and hookah/poly‐users displayed more variable transition patterns. Adolescents were more likely to transition to non‐use (versus become/remain e‐cig users) if they were older (cigarette users, SLT users), younger (e‐cig users), other race (SLT users), male (SLT users) or had less‐educated parents (SLT users) compared with their counterparts. Hispanic (versus white) cigarette users were more likely to transition to non‐users than to persist in this use. Conclusions: Among adolescents in the United States, patterns of tobacco use characterized by the use, mainly, of single, specific products appear to be stable, particularly by late adolescence. In contrast, patterns characterized by polytobacco use appear to be more variable and may represent experimentation without specialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]