Preventive Medicine Reports (Dec 2022)
Sleep troubles in adolescence relate to future initiation of ENDS Use: A longitudinal cohort design using the PATH study waves 4.5–5 (2017–2019)
Abstract
In a recent study, we demonstrated a relationship between self-reported sleep deprivation and youth susceptibility to initiate electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) use; however, we were hampered by cross-sectional data. This study builds on our previous work by performing secondary analysis using the nationally representative Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study datasets from wave 4.5 (2017–2018) and wave 5 (2018–2019) among respondents aged 12–17. Using a longitudinal cohort design, we assessed the extent self-reported sleep troubles at wave 4.5 related to transition from never-to-ever ENDS use by wave 5. We assessed youth who reported never having used any type of tobacco previously and who reported not using alcohol or other illicit substances the previous year. We ran four Poisson regression models on the dependent variable never-to-ever ENDS users at wave 5 and self-reported sleep troubles in the past year at wave 4.5. We controlled for demographic and sociographic factors and, in our final model, tobacco availability in home, exposure to ENDS advertising on social media, past year anxiety, depression, body mass index, physical activity, close friends that use ENDS, perceived harm of ENDS, school performance, sensation seeking, and the susceptibility of youth to initiate ENDS. Even when controlling for these factors, sleep troubles at wave 4.5 significantly and positively related to ENDS initiation by wave 5 (Past year sleep trouble: RR = 1.48 95 % CI = [1.14–1.93]). This key and novel finding has important implications for preventing youth ENDS use via protective self-care and social-environmental approaches.