Introduction: Although research suggests that youth e-cigarette experimentation is associated with later combustible cigarette experimentation, it is unclear how this relates to habitual smoking. This study assesses how minors' patterns of combustible cigarette and e-cigarette experimentation relate to habitual smoking at ages 18-21 years.
Methods: Between November 2016 and May 2017, a cross-sectional, online survey of current and retrospective cigarette use was fielded among individuals aged 18-21 years who had tried combustible cigarettes or e-cigarettes (n=1,424). Logistic regressions tested how experimentation patterns prior to age 18 years related to two indicators of current habitual smoking: daily smoking and current established smoking (past 30-day use among those who had smoked ≥100 cigarettes).
Results: Respondents who first tried combustible cigarettes or e-cigarettes as minors (n=1,096) were more likely to be current established users (64%) than those who first experimented at ages 18-21 years (41%). Experimentation patterns in individuals aged <18 years beginning with combustible cigarettes were the most predictive of later smoking. Relative to those who first experimented at ages >17 years (n=328), trying only combustible cigarettes as a minor yielded a 175% increase in one's odds of being an established smoker (AOR=2.75, 95% CI=1.99, 3.79) and a 161% increase for daily smoking (AOR=2.61, 95% CI=1.75, 3.90). Trying combustibles and then e-cigarettes yielded sizable increases in both habitual smoking measures, whereas trying e-cigarettes before combustibles yielded smaller effects. Trying only e-cigarettes as a minor yielded a 78% decrease in both outcomes, relative to those who did not try either product as minors.
Conclusions: Minors who tried combustible cigarettes were more likely to be habitual smokers at ages 18-21 years than those who tried e-cigarettes alone.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2019.02.009 | DOI Listing |
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy
January 2025
Dep Prevention Research and Social Medicine, University Medicine Greifswald, Institute of Community Medicine, W.-Rathenau-Str. 48, 17475, Greifswald, Germany.
Background: Little is known about mortality from four disorder combinations: fully attributable to alcohol or tobacco, partly attributable to both alcohol and tobacco, to tobacco only, to alcohol only.
Aim: To analyze whether residents who had disclosed risky alcohol drinking or daily tobacco smoking had a shorter time to death than non-risky drinkers and never daily smokers twenty years later according to the disorder combinations.
Methods: A random adult general population sample (4,075 study participants) of a northern German area had been interviewed in the years 1996-1997.
HCA Healthc J Med
December 2024
Del Sol Medical Center, El Paso, Texas.
Background: Addiction affects millions of people, often resulting from a complex interplay between genetic and environmental factors, and is frequently linked to mental health disorders. Many experts agree there is no cure for addiction, but there are effective treatments available. Many patients continue to succumb to addiction despite treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Rural Med
January 2025
Department of Applied Bioresource Science, The United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Ehime University, Japan.
Objective: This study aimed to elucidate the relationship between daily eating habits and stroke risk factors in O City, Ehime Prefecture, Japan, using stroke registry data collected over a 26-year follow-up period based on standardized national criteria.
Materials And Methods: Overall, 1,793 middle-aged Japanese participants (446 men and 1,347 women) who completed a 33-item Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ) and had no history of stroke were matched to those from O City in a stroke registry from 1996 to 2022. Stroke diagnosis for each person was used to determine whether this was their first documented stroke, and we classified strokes as either a cerebral infarction (CI) or a hemorrhagic stroke (HS), the latter which included an intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) or a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH).
Neuropsychopharmacol Rep
March 2025
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Health Informatics and Public Health, School of Public Health, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan.
Heated tobacco products (HTPs) are nicotine-containing products similar to cigarettes and are widely used in Japan. However, there has been insufficient research on nicotine dependence associated with HTP use. This study investigated the association of the types of individuals who smoked with the prevalence of nicotine dependence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
January 2025
Hospital Medicine, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Introduction: Hospitalisation represents an opportunity to identify and treat e-cigarette use among adolescents and young adults (AYAs). Knowledge on how to provide this care is lacking. We aim to fill this gap by developing an e-cigarette use intervention and evaluating preliminary efficacy and implementation outcomes among hospitalised AYAs.
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