Adverse Childhood Experiences and Tobacco Use among Latinx Parents in the USA.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-25 DOI:10.1007/s40615-023-01697-0
Fernanda Lima Cross, Cristina B Bares, Joel Lucio, Karen G Chartier
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Abstract

The current study aimed to understand the effects of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and cultural factors on Latinx parents' tobacco use. Tobacco use is the leading cause of death among Latinx individuals in the USA, and parental use has long-term secondary harm for children. Thus, it is important to examine cultural protective factors that could prevent Latinx parents and children from the negative health effects of tobacco use. Data came from 2813 18- to 50-year-old Latinx respondents who participated in the Wave 3 of the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. They reported having children living in their household and had complete data for the variables of interest. In this sample (mean age = 33.5 years, 53.7% female), 16.4% (95%CI = 14.7%, 18.4%) and 7.4% (95%CI = 6.4%, 8.6%) were current and former smokers, respectively. The multivariate multinomial logistic regression analysis showed that experiencing more ACEs categories was associated with increased likelihood of current and former tobacco use compared to never use. Past year discrimination experiences and being US born (2nd and 3rd-generation parents) also increased the likelihood of current use. Differences in risk of current and former tobacco use were found based on respondents' country of origin, with protection against tobacco use found for most countries compared to being from Puerto Rico. Stronger ethnic-racial identity was not protective against tobacco use. Findings show the importance of considering ACEs and cultural factors when designing and implementing tobacco cessation programs for Latinx parents and increasing awareness of the impact of parents' tobacco use on their children.

美国拉美裔父母的不良童年经历和烟草使用情况。
本研究旨在了解不良童年经历(ACE)和文化因素对拉丁裔父母吸烟的影响。吸烟是美国拉美裔人的主要死因,父母吸烟会对儿童造成长期的二次伤害。因此,研究文化保护因素对防止拉美裔父母和儿童受到烟草使用对健康的负面影响非常重要。数据来自 2813 名 18 至 50 岁的拉美裔受访者,他们参加了全国酒精及相关疾病流行病学调查第 3 波。这些受访者称家中有子女,并提供了相关变量的完整数据。在这些样本中(平均年龄 = 33.5 岁,53.7% 为女性),目前和曾经吸烟的比例分别为 16.4%(95%CI = 14.7%,18.4%)和 7.4%(95%CI = 6.4%,8.6%)。多变量多项式逻辑回归分析表明,与从未使用烟草相比,经历更多的ACE类别与当前和曾经使用烟草的可能性增加有关。过去一年的歧视经历和在美国出生(父母为第二代和第三代)也增加了目前吸烟的可能性。受访者的原籍国不同,当前和曾经使用烟草的风险也不同,与来自波多黎各的受访者相比,大多数原籍国的受访者使用烟草的风险更低。较强的民族-种族认同对吸烟没有保护作用。研究结果表明,在为拉丁裔父母设计和实施戒烟计划时,考虑到ACE和文化因素以及提高父母吸烟对子女影响的意识非常重要。
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
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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