Exclusive e-cigarette use was the most prevalent tobacco use pattern among US 8th, 10th, and 12th graders (6.4%, 13.2%, and 13.8%, respectively), followed by dual use and exclusive combustible use.
Cross-Sectional (n=35,456)
Yes
E-cigarette use is the most prevalent form of tobacco/nicotine use among US adolescents, with lower socioeconomic status predicting higher risk of combustible and dual use.
This study assessed the sociodemographic predictors of exclusive and dual use of the most frequently used nicotine/tobacco products, e-cigarettes, and combustible tobacco among adolescents. Cross-sectional data was from the 2017–2020 Monitoring the Future nationally representative study of eighth, tenth, and twelfth-grade students. We coded past 30 day nicotine/tobacco use into four mutually exclusive categories: no use, e-cigarette use only, combustible use (cigarette or cigar) only, and dual use (e-cigarette and combustible). We pooled the 2017–2020 data to examine the relationship between sex, race/ethnicity, parental education, and each product-use category using multinomial logistic regression, stratified by grade level. Among eighth (N = 11,189), tenth (N = 12,882), and twelfth graders (N = 11,385), exclusive e-cigarette use was the most prevalent pattern (6.4%, 13.2%, 13.8%, respectively), followed by dual use (2.7%, 4.5%, 8.9%), and exclusive combustible use (1.5%, 2.5%, 5.3%). eighth and tenth-grade adolescents whose highest parental education was a 4-year college degree or more had lower odds of exclusive combustible and dual use when compared to adolescents whose highest parental education was less than a high school degree. Research should continue to monitor the differential use of combustible tobacco products and e-cigarettes among adolescents from low socioeconomic status backgrounds or racial/ethnic minority households to inform ongoing and future interventions or policies.
Usidame et al. (Thu,) conducted a cross-sectional in Nicotine and tobacco use (n=35,456). Sociodemographic factors (parental education, race/ethnicity, sex) was evaluated on Past 30-day nicotine/tobacco use (exclusive e-cigarette, exclusive combustible, dual use, or no use). Exclusive e-cigarette use was the most prevalent tobacco use pattern among US 8th, 10th, and 12th graders (6.4%, 13.2%, and 13.8%, respectively), followed by dual use and exclusive combustible use.
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