Literature DB >> 16524960

Brief report: social risk factors predict cigarette smoking progression among adolescents with asthma.

Kenneth P Tercyak1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare smoking progression in adolescents with and without asthma and to compare their psychosocial risk factors.
METHODS: Participants were 1,507 adolescents with asthma and 1,507 healthy matched controls from Waves I and II of the Add Health Project assessed at baseline and again 1 to 2 years later at follow-up. Three levels of smoking progression (defined as smoking more frequently and/or intensely over time) were identified: (a) Late Experimenters (never smokers at baseline, ever smokers at follow-up), (b) Early Experimenters (ever smokers at baseline, current/current frequent smokers at follow-up), and (c) Early Smokers (current smokers at baseline, current frequent smokers at follow-up).
RESULTS: Twenty percent of adolescents experienced progression in their smoking behavior; those with and without asthma were equally likely to progress. Among adolescents who progressed, 37% were Late Experimenters, 42% were Early Experimenters, and 21% were Early Smokers. Exposure to friends who smoked was a consistent and powerful social risk factor for smoking progression among adolescents with asthma-more so than among adolescents without asthma. This effect was intensified among Late Experimenters by the presence of a positive history of parent smoking.
CONCLUSIONS: Findings underscore the importance of addressing cigarette smoking behavior and its social risk factors among adolescents with asthma in both clinical and public health contexts, during early adolescence, and through research on this topic.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16524960     DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsj012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Psychol        ISSN: 0146-8693


  8 in total

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2.  An integration of parents' and best friends' smoking, smoking-specific cognitions, and nicotine dependence in relation to readiness to quit smoking: a comparison between adolescents with and without asthma.

Authors:  Rinka M P van Zundert; Rutger C M E Engels; Marloes Kleinjan; Regina J J M van den Eijnden
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4.  Cigarette Smoking and Alcohol Use among Adolescents and Young Adults with Asthma.

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5.  Prevalence, patterns and correlates of cigarette smoking in male adolescents in northern Jordan, and the influence of waterpipe use and asthma diagnosis: a descriptive cross-sectional study.

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6.  Influence of asthma on the longitudinal trajectories of cigarette use behaviors from adolescence to adulthood using latent growth curve models.

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Review 7.  Smoking cessation strategies for patients with asthma: improving patient outcomes.

Authors:  Jennifer L Perret; Billie Bonevski; Christine F McDonald; Michael J Abramson
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Review 8.  Health risk behavior among chronically ill adolescents: a systematic review of assessment tools.

Authors:  Derrick Ssewanyana; Moses Kachama Nyongesa; Anneloes van Baar; Charles R Newton; Amina Abubakar
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  8 in total

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