Disaggregating Asian American and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (AANHOPI) Adult Tobacco Use: Findings from Wave 1 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, 2013-2014.

Anh B Nguyen
Author Information
  1. Anh B Nguyen: Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), Food and Drug Administration, Office of Science, 10903 New Hampshire Avenue, Building 71, Room G335, Silver Spring, MD, 20993-0002, USA. Anh.Nguyen@fda.hhs.gov.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Tobacco studies often combine data for Asian American and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (AANHOPI) subgroups, masking subgroup differences. This study describes tobacco use (ever use and past 30-day use) among some disaggregated AANHOPI subgroups.
METHODS: Data are from Wave 1 of the 2013-2014 Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, a nationally representative, longitudinal cohort study of civilian non-institutionalized adults and youth in the USA. The dataset contains a sample of 32,320 adults, of which 1623 identified as being of AANHOPI origin. Asian Americans further identified as being Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, or other Asian. Those who identified as Native Hawaiian, Guamanian or Chamarro, Samoan, and Other Pacific Islander were combined into an NHOPI group. Tobacco measures included ever and past 30-day use of cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cigars (traditional cigar, cigarillos, filtered cigar), hookah, and smokeless tobacco including snus pouches, and pipe tobacco. Unadjusted and adjusted estimates for tobacco use are reported by AANHOPI membership and sex.
RESULTS: In general, Asian Indians and Chinese had the lowest and NHOPI had the highest tobacco use prevalence compared to other AANHOPI subgroups. Males generally had higher prevalence compared to females. Prevalence varied by AANHOPI membership and tobacco product. Adjusted prevalence estimates were higher compared to unadjusted estimates for many subgroups, attenuating some unadjusted differences found between AANHOPI subgroups.
DISCUSSION: Tobacco use varies by AANHOPI subgroup and product type. Unadjusted and adjusted analyses can be conducted as tobacco use differences in AANHOPI subgroups may be attributed to socio-economic status differences. Treating these distinct subgroups as a monolithic group may contribute to reliance on tobacco prevention and control strategies that may have limited impact on specific subgroups.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. FD999999/Intramural FDA HHS
  2. HHSN271201100027C/NIDA NIH HHS
  3. HHSN271201600001C/NIDA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Young Adult
Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander
Cigar Smoking
Cigarette Smoking
Pipe Smoking
Tobacco Use
United States
Vaping
Water Pipe Smoking

Word Cloud

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