1. Racial and ethnic differences in distress, discrimination, substance use coping, and nicotine use among parents during COVID-19.
- Author
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Clawson, Ashley H., Cole, Ashley B., Kurien, Christine S., and Blair, Alexandra L.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,NET losses ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,RESEARCH funding ,NICOTINE ,SEX distribution ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,WHITE people ,RACE ,BLACK people ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This study identified contributing factors for tobacco-related inequities among parents (N = 331) during COVID-19. Compared to non-Hispanic White parents, Asian, Black, and multiracial parents experienced greater discrimination. Parents with a nicotine use history experienced greater discrimination and substance use coping relative to tobacco abstainers. Among parents who used nicotine during the pandemic (n = 45), experiencing financial loss, having COVID-19, and greater worries were positively associated with nicotine reductions during COVID-19. Being female, increased family members with COVID-19, discrimination, and substance use coping were negatively associated with nicotine reductions. Tobacco interventions that reduce substance use coping and increase alternative coping are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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