患有多种疾病的美国成年人使用香烟和电子烟的情况

Olatokunbo Osibogun , Wei Li , Rime Jebai , Mohammad Ebrahimi Kalan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景烟草使用导致多种疾病。然而,不同类别的烟草使用对多病症的影响仍未得到充分研究。我们调查了美国成年人中烟草使用类别与多病症之间的关系,以及年龄、性别或种族/人种的潜在调节作用。多病情况通过自我报告的≥2种慢性健康状况来确定。我们将烟草使用分为九类,包括不使用(不使用电子烟或香烟)、曾经使用香烟或电子烟、目前(某些日子/每天使用)使用香烟或电子烟或两者兼用(双重使用)。我们在考虑潜在混杂因素的同时,使用多项式逻辑回归法研究了两者之间的关联。结果在样本(样本数=1,080,257)中,有 28.2% 的人报告患有多种疾病。与不使用电子烟和香烟的人群相比,所有受检类别(以前只吸食电子烟、以前只吸食电子烟、以前只吸食香烟、以前双重吸食、以前吸食香烟/现在吸食电子烟、以前只吸食香烟、现在吸食香烟/以前吸食电子烟和双重吸食)的人群都有更高的多病症几率。我们发现年龄、性别和种族/人种与多病症烟草使用类别之间存在显着的交互作用(p<0.01),其中年轻成人、女性和非西班牙裔多种族人与当前双重使用烟草的关联性更强(p<0.05)。这些发现强调了实施有针对性的公共卫生干预措施的重要性,以降低使用这两种产品带来的健康风险,尤其是在特定人群中,从而降低多病症的发病率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cigarettes and e-cigarettes use among US adults with multimorbidity

Background

Tobacco use leads to multiple illnesses. Yet, the effects of different categories of tobacco use on multimorbidity remain understudied. We investigated the associations between tobacco use categories and multimorbidity and the potential moderating effects of age, sex, or race/ethnicity among adults in the United States.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using pooled data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System for the years 2020–2022. Multimorbidity was ascertained through self-reported ≥2 chronic health conditions. We categorized tobacco use into nine derived from nonuse (did not use e-cigarettes or cigarettes), former cigarette or e-cigarette use, current (used on some days/everyday) cigarette use or e-cigarette use, or both (dual use). We used multinomial logistic regression to investigate the associations while accounting for potential confounding factors.

Results

Within the sample (N=1,080,257), 28.2% reported multimorbidity. For the categories examined (former exclusive e-cigarette, exclusive e-cigarette, former exclusive cigarette, former dual, former cigarette/current e-cigarette, exclusive cigarette, current cigarette/former e-cigarette and dual use), all reported higher odds of having multimorbidity compared to those who reported nonuse of both e-cigarettes and cigarettes. We found significant interactions for age, sex and race/ethnicity with the tobacco use categories for multimorbidity (p<0.01), where stronger associations were observed among younger adults, females and non-Hispanic Multiracial for current dual use (p<0.05).

Conclusions

The use of cigarettes, e-cigarettes, or both was associated with multimorbidity among adults, which was more pronounced among younger adults, females and non-Hispanic Multiracial. These findings underscore the importance of implementing targeted public health interventions to mitigate the health risks associated with using both products, particularly among specific demographics, to reduce the prevalence of multimorbidity.

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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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