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Mental and Social Health

Smoking

Chapman University

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Temporal Trends In Smoking And Nicotine Dependence In Relation To Co-Occurring Substance Use In The United States, 2005-2016, Yun Wang, Ying Liu, Mary Waldron, Alexandra N. Houston-Ludlam, Vivia V. Mccutcheon, Michael T. Lynskey, Pamela A. F. Madden, Kathleen K. Bucholz, Andrew C. Heath, Min Lian Jul 2021

Temporal Trends In Smoking And Nicotine Dependence In Relation To Co-Occurring Substance Use In The United States, 2005-2016, Yun Wang, Ying Liu, Mary Waldron, Alexandra N. Houston-Ludlam, Vivia V. Mccutcheon, Michael T. Lynskey, Pamela A. F. Madden, Kathleen K. Bucholz, Andrew C. Heath, Min Lian

Pharmacy Faculty Articles and Research

Background
Despite an overall decline in tobacco use in the United States, secular trends of smoking and nicotine dependence with co-occurring substance use are not well characterized.

Methods
We examined self-reported tobacco and other substance use in 22,245 participants age 21–59 in the United States from six waves of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Using Joinpoint regression, we assessed secular trends of smoking and nicotine dependence as a function of co-occurring use of alcohol, prescription opioids, marijuana/hashish, cocaine/heroin/methamphetamine, or other injection drug use. Multivariable logistic regressions were fitted to identify the potential risk factors.

Results
During 2005–2016, …


Smoking Selectivity Among Mexican Immigrants To The United States Using Binational Data, 1999–2012, Nancy L. Fleischer, Annie Ro, Georgiana Bostean Jan 2017

Smoking Selectivity Among Mexican Immigrants To The United States Using Binational Data, 1999–2012, Nancy L. Fleischer, Annie Ro, Georgiana Bostean

Sociology Faculty Articles and Research

Mexican immigrants have lower smoking rates than US-born Mexicans, which some scholars attribute to health selection—that individuals who migrate are healthier and have better health behaviors than their non-migrant counterparts. Few studies have examined smoking selectivity using binational data and none have assessed whether selectivity remains constant over time. This study combined binational data from the US and Mexico to examine: 1) the extent to which recent Mexican immigrants (< 10 years) in the US are selected with regard to cigarette smoking compared to non-migrants in Mexico, and 2) whether smoking selectivity varied between 2000 and 2012—a period of declining tobacco use in Mexico and the US. We combined repeated cross-sectional US data (n = 10.901) on adult (ages 20–64) Mexican immigrants and US-born Mexicans from the 1999/2000 and 2011/2012 National Health Interview Survey, and repeated cross-sectional Mexican data on non-migrants (n …