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Wiley InterScience

Addiction

Addiction

Volume 98 Issue 8, Pages 1077 - 1085

Published Online: 8 Sep 2003

Journal compilation © 2010 Society for the Study of Addiction



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RESEARCH REPORT
Most smokeless tobacco use is not a causal gateway to cigarettes: using order of product use to evaluate causation in a national US sample
Lynn T. Kozlowski 1 , Richard J. O'Connor 1 , Beth Quinio Edwards 1 & Brian P. Flaherty 2
 Department of Biobehavioral Health1and  Department of Human Development and Family Studies,2Pennsylvania State University, PA, USA
Correspondence to Lynn T. Kozlowski
Department of Biobehavioral Health
Penn State
315 East Health and Human Development
University Park, PA 16802
USA
Tel: +1 814 8637256
Fax: +1 814 8637525
E-mail: ltk1@psu.edu
Copyright 2003 Society for the Study of Addiction to Alcohol and Other Drugs
KEYWORDS
Gateway • risk factors • smoking • smokeless tobacco

ABSTRACT

Aims To evaluate non-causal and causal patterns of smokeless tobacco (SLT) and cigarette use; to assess the prevalence of 'non-gateway' and possible 'gateway' patterns of SLT use.

Design and setting Data from the Cancer Control Supplement to the 1987 National Health Interview Survey, a representative survey of non-institutionalized adults in the United States. From reported age at first use, participants were categorized by type and sequence of tobacco product use. SUDAAN 8.0.1 was used for statistical analyses.

Participants Males aged 18–34 (n = 3454), weighted to provide estimates of the US population. A subsample of males aged 23–34 (n = 2614) was analyzed to minimize the possibility of future product switching.

Measurements Smoking status, smokeless tobacco (snuff, chewing tobacco, both) use status, age at regular use of cigarettes, age at first use of smokeless tobacco.

Findings Of those 23–34-year-olds who had ever used SLT with or without cigarettes, 77.2% (95% CI: 71.3, 83.3) were classifiable as non-gateway users in that 35.0% (95% CI: 29.9, 40.1) had only used SLT and 42.2% (95% CI: 36.8, 47.7) had used cigarettes first. Cigarette use in younger cohorts was less common, despite increased SLT use. Those who used cigarettes before moist snuff were 2.1 times more likely to have quit smoking (95% CI 1.21,6.39) than cigarette-only users.

Conclusions The large majority of SLT users are non-gateway users. Causal gateway effects should be of minor concern for policy. SLT may be more likely to prevent smoking than cause it.


Submitted 10 September 2002; initial review completed 27 January 2003; final version accepted 10 February 2003

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1360-0443.2003.00460.x About DOI

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