Tobacco Use Among Multi-ethnic Latino Populations
Overview
Social Sciences
Authors
Affiliations
Objectives: To examine tobacco use among New York City resident Latin Americans from different countries of origin and with different levels of acculturation reflected by language use.
Design: Effective health promotion programs, particularly those aimed at smoking cessation and prevention, require careful investigation into possible cultural and societal factors influencing predictors and barriers to preventive health behavior. National data characterizing cigarette smoking behavior among broadly defined racial/ethnic groups (e.g., black, Hispanic) have rarely examined the extent or importance of cultural variation and acculturation within and among ethnic groups. This report addresses these issues.
Methods: In this study, we examine self-reported cigarette smoking behavior from a 1992 telephone survey of a quota sample of Puerto Rican, Dominican, Colombian, and Ecuadorian Hispanics living in New York City. We compare results from these data with results from a random sample of New York City Hispanics from the Tobacco Use Supplement to the 1992-93 Current Population Survey.
Results: Both data sets demonstrated that Puerto Ricans were significantly more likely to be current smokers and ever smokers than the other three Latino groups. Among Hispanic women in the quota sample, those who chose to complete the interview in English were much more likely to report ever smoking than those women who chose to complete the interview in Spanish.
Conclusions: The relationship between smoking behavior and acculturation (as measured by language usage) appears to be complex and sensitive to methodological issues of sampling and interview language.
Web-Based Health Information Technology: Access Among Latinos Varies by Subgroup Affiliation.
Gonzalez M, Sanders-Jackson A, Wright T J Med Internet Res. 2019; 21(4):e10389.
PMID: 30990462 PMC: 6488958. DOI: 10.2196/10389.
Tobacco cessation among low-income smokers: motivational enhancement and nicotine patch treatment.
Bock B, Papandonatos G, de Dios M, Abrams D, Azam M, Fagan M Nicotine Tob Res. 2013; 16(4):413-22.
PMID: 24174612 PMC: 3954421. DOI: 10.1093/ntr/ntt166.
Abraido-Lanza A, Chao M, Florez K Soc Sci Med. 2005; 61(6):1243-55.
PMID: 15970234 PMC: 3587355. DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.01.016.
Lara M, Gamboa C, Kahramanian M, Morales L, Bautista D Annu Rev Public Health. 2005; 26:367-97.
PMID: 15760294 PMC: 5920562. DOI: 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144615.
Undoing an epidemiological paradox: the tobacco industry's targeting of US Immigrants.
Acevedo-Garcia D, Barbeau E, Bishop J, Pan J, Emmons K Am J Public Health. 2004; 94(12):2188-93.
PMID: 15569972 PMC: 1448610. DOI: 10.2105/ajph.94.12.2188.