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Gender differences in the associations of early onset poly tobacco and drug use prior to age 18 with the prevalence of adult bronchitis in the United States. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the link between early onset polysubstance use before age 18 and bronchitis prevalence among U.S. adults, revealing that 3.8% of the sample reported bronchitis, with higher rates in females (5.1%) than males (2.3%).
  • Nine substance use variables were classified into two groups: early onset poly tobacco use and early onset poly drug use, with findings indicating that gender influences these associations; tobacco use was associated with bronchitis in males, while drug use was linked to it in females.
  • The research suggests that factors like obesity and tobacco use, regardless of gender, increase the likelihood of bronchitis, highlighting the need for gender-specific prevention strategies.

Article Abstract

Purpose: We investigated the associations of early onset polysubstance use prior to age 18 with the prevalence of bronchitis among U.S. adults and tested whether the associations differ by gender.

Methods: A total of 77,950 adults, of them 2,653 with bronchitis in the past year, were from the combined 2013 and 2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health data. The variable cluster analysis was used to classify nine variables about substance use prior to age 18 (cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, marijuana, cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines, ecstasy, and phencyclidine). Weighted multivariate logistic regression analysis (MLR) was used to examine the associations with bronchitis.

Results: Nine variables were divided into two clusters: early onset poly tobacco use (three tobacco use variables) and early onset poly drug use (six drug use variables). The overall prevalence of bronchitis was 3.8% (5.1% for females and 2.3% for males). MLR analysis showed that being female, elderly (ages 65 and above), obese, and early onset poly tobacco use were associated with increased odds of bronchitis (p < 0.05). Gender-stratified analyses showed that early-onset poly tobacco use was significantly associated with bronchitis only in males, whereas early onset poly drug use was associated with bronchitis only in females. Moreover, obesity and tobacco use in the past year revealed associations with bronchitis regardless of gender.

Conclusions: Obesity, early onset poly tobacco use prior to age 18, and tobacco use in the past year were positively associated with bronchitis; furthermore, the associations of early onset polysubstance use with bronchitis differed by gender, which indicated that gender differences should be considered in developing effective prevention strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8366588PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10550887.2020.1847992DOI Listing

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