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Journal Article

Citation

Ganz O, Rimal RN, Johnson AL, Cohn AM, Horn KA, Delnevo CD, Villanti AC. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019; 205: 107686.

Affiliation

Vermont Center on Behavior and Health, University of Vermont, 1 South Prospect Street, Burlington, VT 05401, United States; Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, 1 South Prospect Street, Burlington, VT 05401, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.107686

PMID

31706253

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking is disproportionately high among adults with two or more psychiatric disorders (psychiatric comorbidities), yet research on non-cigarette tobacco use among this population is scant. Additionally, most studies on tobacco use this among this population rely on psychiatric diagnoses rather than individual symptoms, potentially excluding individuals with symptom-specific issues that increase their risk for tobacco use but do not meet the criteria for diagnosis. The objectives of this study were to identify unique classes of individuals based on symptoms of psychiatric disorders and to assess differences in demographic characteristics and tobacco use behaviors between classes.

METHODS: This study used data from Wave 2 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study adult dataset. Latent class analysis was used to classify individuals based on internalizing, externalizing and substance use problems. Bivariate and multivariable models examined the association between latent class membership and current use of cigarettes, cigar products, electronic nicotine delivery systems, pipe, hookah and smokeless tobacco products. Poly tobacco use was also examined.

RESULTS: Three latent classes were identified. The "normative" class reported low prevalence of all symptoms, the "severe internalizing and non-violent externalizing" class reported severe internalizing problems and non-violent externalizing problems and the "severe" class reported high prevalence of all symptoms. Tobacco use was highest for the "severe" class and lowest for the "normative" class across products.

CONCLUSIONS: Individuals in the "severe" class may be at elevated risk of tobacco-related morbidity and mortality and would likely benefit from targeted tobacco control interventions.

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Comorbidities; Mental health; Non-cigarette tobacco products; Substance use

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