NAQC Newsroom: Research

Exploring Factors Shaping Tobacco and Marijuana Use among Sexual Minority Adolescents

Monday, May 19, 2025  
Posted by: Natalia Gromov

Lin MY, Lockhart D, Denlinger-Apte R.
Exploring Factors Shaping Tobacco and Marijuana Use among Sexual Minority Adolescents
Nicotine Tob Res. 2025 May 6:ntaf097. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntaf097. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40326389.

Purpose: This study sought to identify the predominant factors associated with tobacco and marijuana/cannabis use among adolescents according to their sexual identity.

Methods: Using the 2023 National Youth Tobacco Survey, we examined current use of e-cigarettes, cigarettes, and marijuana/cannabis vaping among adolescents. We used dominance analyses and logistic regression models to assess the relative importance of factors linked to tobacco and marijuana/cannabis use. The analyses were stratified by sexual identity (straight, sexual minorities, unsure) and grade levels (middle-school versus high-school).

Results: The study sample includes 6,654 middle-school and 8,274 high-school students. Three themes emerge from the dominance analysis. First, exposure to e-cigarette or cigarette use at home or in vehicles consistently ranked as the leading factor associated with smoking and vaping across school levels and sexual identity, explaining up to 44% of the predicted variance. Second, the perception of occasional e-cigarette or cigarette use as little to no harm was a top factor, linked to e-cigarette use among sexual minority students and straight high-school students, as well as cigarette use among straight students and sexual minority high-school students. It explained up to 21.6% and 26.5% of the variance in current e-cigarette and cigarette use, respectively. Third, mental stress was a dominant factor associated with tobacco and marijuana/cannabis use among sexual minority middle-school students, explaining up to 21% of the variance.

Conclusions: This study identifies modifiable factors linked to adolescent tobacco and marijuana use. Public health initiatives targeting these factors may reduce smoking and vaping, especially among sexual minority adolescents.

Implications: Adolescents in the LGBTQ+ community use tobacco and marijuana at higher rates than their straight peers. This study offers insight into the relative importance of a variety of sociodemographic and environmental factors contributing to increased use. The most dominant factors, identified as immediate environmental exposure, e-cigarette risk perceptions, and mental stress should be prioritized when developing targeted interventions to reduce smoking and vaping in this priority population.