Despite the decades of progress, Vaping has rejuvenated the risk of adolescent smoking, placing today’s e -cigarette users behind where youth began in 1974.
Study: Risk of use of Teenage Cigarettes in three UK birth groups before and after electronic cigarettes. Credit Picture: Aleksandr Yu/Shutterstock.com
Import
Teenage smoking has been severely reduced over the last 25 years, mainly due to successful policies and smoking efforts, coupled with increasing levels of education and lower smoking rates among parents. However, the use of e-cigarette has become extremely popular among modern youth. A study published in BMJ magazines It indicates that the teenage atmosphere is associated with increased use of tobacco cigarettes and can lead to double use (both smoking and cigarette smoking) later in life.
However, while relaxation is linked to a higher risk of smoking, the direction of causality remains unclear.
The current study investigated whether teenage relaxation is linked to the increase or decline in smoking rates among young people. It was compared to the chances of smoking cigarettes in three groups extending in 1974 to 2018, these include three generations of teenagers, starting with those who had been disturbed and not entrusted to tobacco policies and interventions and ended with more recent generations.
For the study
The data came from three birth groups of the United Kingdom (1958, 1970 and 2001). This long period has made it possible to detect the fall in the smoking of adolescents over time, while recording the correlation of increasing trends using electronic cigarettes (with the younger group. The latest group was the study of the millennium coach (MCS).
On the contrary, the National Child Development Study (NCDS) includes teenagers who lived in the period during which smoking was at its peak. The British Corte (BCS) study consists of those exposed to widespread smoking in childhood, but to only 40.
Teenage cigarette smoking in 1974, 1986 and 2018 were recorded by self -report at the age of 16, 16 and 17 years old, respectively, in every coil. The decrease in age 17 was also recorded by the self -report to MCS.
Study findings
In 1974, 33% of adolescents smoke, reducing 25% in 1986 and to a low 12% in the next two decades, to 2018.
Interestingly, all three groups had similar childhood risk factors for smoking in later adolescence. These included a low school commitment, consumption at the age of 16 or 17, the verbal ability and external behaviors reported by the mother or the primary caregiver. The latter included being a fidgety, disobedient, anxious and warm.
While 94% of adolescents in the NCDS said they had drunk alcohol by 16 or 17, this was reduced to 83% in the MCS group. Parent smoking decreased from 70% to 27%, respectively. The use of maternal tobacco during pregnancy was also reduced to the last group.
In each coorde, consumption 16 or 17 predicted a risk of smoking of three to four, compared to non -transmitters. More outdoor behavior increased the chances of up to 34%. The poor commitment of the school and the low verbal ability were also associated worldwide with a higher risk of smoking. Parental jobs, education and smoking habits had less consistent results.
For the younger group, the presence of the mattress stood out as a decisive factor in smoking cigarettes. Young people in the MCS team who did not have a 1.4% chance of smoking, compared to 33% between current youth. Paradoxically, this is higher than the risk in NCDS (32%) or BCS (22%).
In other words, adolescents MCS who are currently dealing with the risk of smoking at the 1974 level, long before taking off against tobacco. Even those who had only experimented with electronic cigarettes had a risk of smoking 12.7%, compared to 1.4% among those who had never used them.
Compared to previous or experimental users, current vapers were 3.3 times more likely to smoke cigarettes, while users never had 90% lower smoking chance.
Conclusions
It is vital to examine the role of adolescence in later decisions to smoke or possibly participate in double use.
The historical reduction in smoking is visible to the latest birth group, but it is reversed dramatically among today’s electronic cigarette users, which make up about 11% of cog. The prevalence of smoking remained very low between the rest of the coorde, especially those who had never been infected.
The use of the electronic cigarette has emerged as a powerful indicator for the increased risk of smoking, although irritation was initially considered to have had little risk for youth.
The authors warn that the study is observant and cannot determine the causality, especially since the start time against smoking has not been established. However, the consistency of trends in the three groups enhances confidence in observed standards.
Since the current increase in smoking risk contrasts with the improvement of other risk factors, findings suggest that the launch can undermine the progress of successive public health and anti-corn policies implemented in five decades.
“Politics and prevention should seek to prevent exposure to teenage nicotine through electronic and fuel cigarettes. “Young people who should explicitly target tobacco control interventions, combined with strong preventive efforts against the situation.