Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health, Department of Health Behavior and Biological Sciences, School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2021 Nov 5;23(12):2065-2074. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntab127.
Sexual minorities are at increased risk for tobacco use; however, there is heterogeneity in this risk by sociodemographic factors.
This study sought to understand if vulnerability to tobacco use among US sexual minorities varies by age group. For this study we used data from wave 4 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health adolescent and adult surveys (n = 37 959), a nationally representative survey. We examined five nicotine/tobacco use outcomes by sex and sexual identity across four age groups. The five outcomes included past 30-day e-cigarette use, past 30-day cigarette use, past 30-day other tobacco use, the number of tobacco products used, and nicotine dependence symptoms.
For males, sexual identity differences were greatest in middle adulthood, particularly for bisexual males; adjusted odds ratios and adjusted incident rate ratios ranged from 2.08 to 5.59 in middle adulthood compared to 0.83-1.62 in adolescence. For females, sexual identity differences were persistent from adolescence through middle adulthood. We found significant differences most consistently for nicotine dependence symptoms when comparing gay/lesbian and bisexual females across multiple age groups; adjusted incident rate ratios ranged from 1.90 in middle adulthood to 3.26 in adolescence.
Risk among sexual minorities varied considerably across age groups and by nicotine/tobacco product and severity of symptoms. Our findings underscore the importance of looking beyond single tobacco products when examining nicotine/tobacco differences related to sexual identity and in examining differences by age group. Our results demonstrating age-varying risk among sexual minorities have important implications for tobacco prevention and cessation efforts.
This study identifies important age variation in sexual minority differences in tobacco use, particularly among males. This study also shows that many sexual minorities not only have higher risk for tobacco and nicotine product use but also use significantly more tobacco products and have higher nicotine dependence symptom scores. These results have important implications for implementation of nicotine and tobacco prevention and cessation strategies for sexual minority adolescents and adults.
性少数群体(同性恋、双性恋和跨性别者)使用烟草的风险增加;然而,这种风险在社会人口因素方面存在异质性。
本研究旨在了解美国性少数群体中对烟草使用的易感性是否因年龄组而异。为此,我们使用了来自全国代表性调查——青少年和成人烟草与健康评估(Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health,PATH)调查第 4 波的数据(n = 37959)。我们按性别和性身份在四个年龄组中检查了五个尼古丁/烟草使用结果。这五个结果包括过去 30 天电子烟使用、过去 30 天香烟使用、过去 30 天其他烟草使用、使用的烟草产品数量和尼古丁依赖症状。
对于男性,性身份差异在中年最大,特别是对于双性恋男性;与青春期相比,中年调整后的优势比和调整后的发病率比范围为 2.08 至 5.59;而青春期为 0.83-1.62。对于女性,性身份差异从青春期到中年一直存在。当比较跨多个年龄组的同性恋/女同性恋和双性恋女性的尼古丁依赖症状时,我们发现了最一致的显著差异;调整后的发病率比范围从中年的 1.90 到青春期的 3.26。
性少数群体的风险在不同年龄组和不同尼古丁/烟草产品以及症状严重程度之间差异很大。我们的研究结果强调,在研究与性身份相关的尼古丁/烟草差异以及研究年龄组差异时,不仅需要超越单一烟草产品,还需要超越单一烟草产品。我们的研究结果表明,性少数群体的风险随着年龄的变化而变化,这对青少年和成年期的性少数群体的烟草预防和戒烟工作具有重要意义。
本研究确定了性少数群体在烟草使用方面存在重要的年龄差异,尤其是男性。本研究还表明,许多性少数群体不仅使用烟草和尼古丁产品的风险更高,而且使用的烟草产品数量明显更多,尼古丁依赖症状评分也更高。这些结果对实施针对性少数青少年和成年人的尼古丁和烟草预防和戒烟策略具有重要意义。