Article de Périodique
Community- and individual-level risk factors of past month e-cigarette use among adolescents in France (2021)
Auteur(s) :
VUOLO, M. ;
JANSSEN, E. ;
LE NEZET, O. ;
SPILKA, S.
Année
2021
Page(s) :
art. 108823
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Domaine :
Tabac / Tobacco / e-cigarette
Discipline :
EPI (Epidémiologie / Epidemiology)
Thésaurus géographique
FRANCE
Thésaurus mots-clés
ESCAPAD
;
E-CIGARETTE
;
FACTEUR DE RISQUE
;
ADOLESCENT
;
TABAC
;
ETUDE TRANSVERSALE
;
GEOGRAPHIE
;
DEPARTEMENT
;
PROFIL SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIQUE
Résumé :
Purpose: Studies of adolescent e-cigarette use infrequently consider how environmental effects impact use. Adolescent e-cigarette use in France is also understudied, yet an important contrast since e-cigarette use rarely precedes conventional tobacco use and daily tobacco use is common. We examine whether there is significant variation in e-cigarette use across the geographic unit of départements (n = 95), and whether community factors explain these differences and individual-level probabilities of e-cigarette use.
Methods: The ESCAPAD survey is a cross-sectional, nationally representative survey collected at a day of civic and military information mandatory for French 17-year-olds. We use the 2014 (n = 22,023) and 2017 (n = 39,115) surveys and geographic information from Eurostat and INSEE. Multilevel, multiple logistic regression models examine any and daily past month e-cigarette use.
Results: We find significant département-level variation in both outcomes, with a considerable proportion of this variation explained by département-level factors. Net of numerous significant individual-level covariates, département-level unemployment (OR = 1.049, p < .05), poverty (OR=0.975, p < .05), age structure (OR=0.720, p < .01), and population growth (OR=0.987 p < .01) were associated with any past month use. The département-level percentage of adolescents using conventional tobacco daily was associated with individual-level any (OR=1.029, p < .001) and daily (OR=1.033, p < .01) e-cigarette use. Predicted probabilities demonstrate that département-level and individual-level tobacco use together were associated with e-cigarette use.
Conclusions: Researchers should incorporate community effects into studies of e-cigarette use. Particularly, the tobacco use environment contributes to risk of e-cigarette use. For policymakers, resources may be mobilized to address local socioeconomic, demographic, and tobacco use patterns to potentially affect adolescent e-cigarette use.
Highlights:
• Aside from schools, multilevel studies of adolescent e-cigarette use are rare.
• France is a unique context where daily tobacco use is high and typically precedes e-cigarette use.
• Individual-level e-cigarette use is associated with geographic-level demographics, socioeconomics, and youth substance use.
• Tobacco use environment impacts e-cigarette use and is particularly consequential when the adolescent uses tobacco daily.
• E-cigarette research, prevention, and intervention should incorporate environmental effects.
Methods: The ESCAPAD survey is a cross-sectional, nationally representative survey collected at a day of civic and military information mandatory for French 17-year-olds. We use the 2014 (n = 22,023) and 2017 (n = 39,115) surveys and geographic information from Eurostat and INSEE. Multilevel, multiple logistic regression models examine any and daily past month e-cigarette use.
Results: We find significant département-level variation in both outcomes, with a considerable proportion of this variation explained by département-level factors. Net of numerous significant individual-level covariates, département-level unemployment (OR = 1.049, p < .05), poverty (OR=0.975, p < .05), age structure (OR=0.720, p < .01), and population growth (OR=0.987 p < .01) were associated with any past month use. The département-level percentage of adolescents using conventional tobacco daily was associated with individual-level any (OR=1.029, p < .001) and daily (OR=1.033, p < .01) e-cigarette use. Predicted probabilities demonstrate that département-level and individual-level tobacco use together were associated with e-cigarette use.
Conclusions: Researchers should incorporate community effects into studies of e-cigarette use. Particularly, the tobacco use environment contributes to risk of e-cigarette use. For policymakers, resources may be mobilized to address local socioeconomic, demographic, and tobacco use patterns to potentially affect adolescent e-cigarette use.
Highlights:
• Aside from schools, multilevel studies of adolescent e-cigarette use are rare.
• France is a unique context where daily tobacco use is high and typically precedes e-cigarette use.
• Individual-level e-cigarette use is associated with geographic-level demographics, socioeconomics, and youth substance use.
• Tobacco use environment impacts e-cigarette use and is particularly consequential when the adolescent uses tobacco daily.
• E-cigarette research, prevention, and intervention should incorporate environmental effects.
Affiliation :
Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA
French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction - Observatoire français des drogues et des toxicomanies (OFDT), Paris, France
French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction - Observatoire français des drogues et des toxicomanies (OFDT), Paris, France
Historique