AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how trends in cigarette smoking in the U.S. differ by education, race, sex, and region from 1995 to 2019.
  • Education-related disparities in smoking prevalence increased, particularly among Black or African American adults, with a notable rise in those with lower educational attainment.
  • The findings suggest that the decline in smoking rates is less pronounced among individuals with less than high school education, highlighting growing inequalities in smoking behaviors over time.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Despite its overall decline in the United States, trends in cigarette smoking could vary by intersection with demographic characteristics. We explored trends in education-related disparities in current smoking among U.S. adults by race (Black or African American and White), sex, and U.S. census region.

Aims And Methods: Data were from U.S. civilian non-institutionalized adults (aged ≥18 years) who self-identified as Black or African American and White and participated in the 1995-2019 Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey. We estimated average annual percent changes in current cigarette smoking by the intersections of race, sex, census region, and educational attainment. We calculated educated-related prevalence differences in current cigarette smoking by subtracting the prevalence of bachelor's degrees from that of
Results: Education-related disparities in current cigarette smoking increased over time, especially among Black or African American male (PD1995-1996 = 22.8%; PD2018-2019 = 27.2%) and female adults (PD1995-1996 = 12.1%; PD2018-2019 = 16.5%). By region, Black or African American male adults in the Midwest showed the largest increase in education-related current cigarette smoking disparities, followed by Black or African American male and female adults in the South, and White male and female adults in the Midwest. These findings were because of small to no declines in the prevalence of current cigarette smoking among those with
Conclusion And Relevance: The gap in the prevalence of current cigarette smoking by education widened over time, especially among Black or African American adults in certain regions.

Implications: Despite the decline in the prevalence of current cigarette smoking in the U.S. population overall, such public health gain may not benefit all individuals equally. Using the data from a U.S. representative serial cross-sectional survey study during 1995-2019, we found that disparities in current cigarette smoking prevalence between those with

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10032197PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntac238DOI Listing

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