The Relationship Between Time Spent on Social Media and Adolescent Cigarette, E-cigarette, and Dual Use: A Longitudinal Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study.

IF 3 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Amrit Kaur Purba, Marion Henderson, Andrew Baxter, Anna Pearce, S Vittal Katikireddi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: To estimate the effect of social media use in 14 year olds on risk of and inequalities in cigarette, e-cigarette, and dual use at 17 years, using the UK-representative Millennium Cohort Study (born 2000-2002).

Aims and methods: The relationship of time spent on social media (using questionnaires [n = 8987] and time-use-diaries [n = 2520]) with cigarette, e-cigarette, and dual use was estimated using adjusted odds ratios (AORs) or relative risk ratios (ARRRs). Effect modification was examined (using parental education as an indicator for socioeconomic circumstances) by comparing adjusted risk differences within low and high-parental education groups. Analyses accounted for prespecified confounders (identified via directed acyclic graphs), baseline outcome measures (to address reverse causality), sample design, attrition, and item-missingness (through multiple imputation).

Results: Time spent on social media was associated with increased risk of cigarette, e-cigarette, and dual use in a dose-response manner. Social media use for ≥2 hours/day (vs. 1-<30 minutes) was associated with increased cigarette (AOR 2.76 [95% confidence interval 2.19 to 3.48]), e-cigarette (3.24 [2.59 to 4.05]), and dual use (ARRR 4.11 [2.77 to 6.08]). The risk of cigarette use among 30 minutes-<1 hour/day users (vs. non-users) were smaller in those with high versus low parental education (ARDs 1.4% vs. 12.4%). Similar findings were observed across the higher time categories. Analyses using time-use-diaries, in complete case samples, and with additional adjustment for baseline outcome measures generally revealed similar findings.

Conclusions: After accounting for observed confounders and potential reverse causality, findings suggest social media use increases the risk of cigarette, e-cigarette, and dual use in a dose-response manner. Guidance addressing adolescent online safety should be prioritized.

Implications: This study's identification of a dose-response relationship and differential effects across socioeconomic groups, could assist in the development of guidance on time spent on social media. The adverse effects of social media use on adolescent cigarette, e-cigarette, and dual use supports legislation aimed at promoting adolescent online safety. Study findings strengthen calls to prohibit social media marketing of nicotine-related products and importantly highlight the need to increase awareness and understanding of the underlying algorithms which drive adolescent exposure to nicotine-related content on social media to ensure they are functioning in a way that best serves the adolescent population.

花在社交媒体上的时间与青少年吸烟、吸电子烟和双重使用之间的关系:英国千年队列研究纵向分析》。
简介利用具有英国代表性的千年队列研究(2000-2002 年出生),估算 14 岁儿童使用社交媒体对 17 岁时吸烟、吸电子烟和双重使用的风险和不平等的影响:使用调整后的几率比(AORs)或相对风险比(ARRRs)估算了在社交媒体上花费的时间(使用调查问卷[n = 8987]和时间使用日记[n = 2520])与吸烟、电子烟和双重使用的关系。通过比较低父母教育程度组和高父母教育程度组的调整后风险差异,研究了效应修正(使用父母教育程度作为社会经济环境的指标)。分析考虑了预先指定的混杂因素(通过有向无环图确定)、基线结果测量(解决反向因果关系)、样本设计、自然减员和项目缺失(通过多重估算):结果:在社交媒体上花费的时间与卷烟、电子烟和双重使用风险的增加呈剂量反应关系。社交媒体使用时间≥2小时/天(与1小时/天相比):在考虑了观察到的混杂因素和潜在的反向因果关系后,研究结果表明,社交媒体的使用会以剂量反应的方式增加吸烟、吸电子烟和双重使用的风险。应优先考虑针对青少年网络安全的指导:本研究发现了剂量-反应关系以及不同社会经济群体的不同影响,这有助于制定关于社交媒体使用时间的指导意见。使用社交媒体对青少年吸烟、吸电子烟和双重使用的不利影响支持旨在促进青少年网络安全的立法。研究结果加强了禁止在社交媒体上推销尼古丁相关产品的呼声,同时也强调了需要提高对青少年在社交媒体上接触尼古丁相关内容的基本算法的认识和理解,以确保这些算法以最适合青少年群体的方式运行。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Nicotine & Tobacco Research
Nicotine & Tobacco Research 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
10.60%
发文量
268
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Nicotine & Tobacco Research is one of the world''s few peer-reviewed journals devoted exclusively to the study of nicotine and tobacco. It aims to provide a forum for empirical findings, critical reviews, and conceptual papers on the many aspects of nicotine and tobacco, including research from the biobehavioral, neurobiological, molecular biologic, epidemiological, prevention, and treatment arenas. Along with manuscripts from each of the areas mentioned above, the editors encourage submissions that are integrative in nature and that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries. The journal is sponsored by the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT). It publishes twelve times a year.
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