| Literature DB >> 18547434 |
Emmanuel Rudatsikira1, Adamson S Muula, Seter Siziya, Ronald H Mataya.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many studies examining the social correlates of tobacco use among adolescents fail to recognise theories of health behaviour and health promotion in their analysis. Using the Socio-Ecologiocal Model (SEM) we assessed the demographic and social factors associated with current cigarette smoking among adolescents in Thailand.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18547434 PMCID: PMC2435109 DOI: 10.1186/1755-7682-1-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Med ISSN: 1755-7682
Exposure to tobacco advertisement among adolescents in Thailand
| Characteristic | Number of participants | % of total and 95% CI |
| Seen cigarette brand name on TV in past 30 days | 13,037 | 33.8 (30.9, 36.4) |
| Males | 6,899 | 39.3 (36.9, 41.6) |
| Females | 6,138 | 27.3 (24.0, 30.8) |
| Has item with cigarette brand logo | 18,428 | 40.8 (37.5, 45.2) |
| Males | 9,440 | 43.7 (41.8, 45.7) |
| Females | 8,988 | 37.7 (35.9, 40.2) |
| Seen tobacco adverts on the internet in past 30 days | 18,588 | 45.5 (41.9, 48.8) |
| Males | 9,536 | 48.4 (45.4, 51.4) |
| Females | 9,049 | 41.2 (38.6, 44.7) |
Attitudes towards tobacco smoking distributed by gender in Thailand
| Characteristic | Number of participants/Total for category | % of total and 95% CI |
| Felt that boys who smoke have more friends | 12,408 | 58.3 (55.8, 60.8) |
| Males | 6,510 | 60.7 (58.2, 63.2) |
| Females | 5,898 | 56.2 (52.2, 60.2) |
| Felt like girls who smoke had more friends | 14,031 | 20.0 (19.4, 22.8) |
| Males | 7,336 | 22.5 (20.9, 24.2) |
| Females | 6,695 | 19.7 (17.1, 22.7) |
| Felt that boys who smoke are more attractive | 14,720 | 16.5 (15.3, 17.8) |
| Males | 7,310 | 21.4 (19.3, 23.7) |
| Females | 7,410 | 12.5 (11.4, 13.7) |
| Felt that girls who smoke are more attractive | 15,411 | 7.8 (6.7, 8.9) |
| Males | 7,710 | 10.7 (9.6, 12.0) |
| Females | 7,701 | 5.3 (3.8, 7.3) |
| Felt that smoking is harmful to health | 18,871 | 86.7 (85.6, 88.1) |
| Males | 9,695 | 82.3 (80.2, 84.2) |
| Females | 9,176 | 90.8 (89.1, 92.3) |
Factors associated with current smoking in Thailand in bivariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis
| Characteristic | Current smoking (%, n) | Unadjusted Odds ratio (95% CIa) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
| Age (years) | |||
| 11–12 | 20.0 (2144) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 13 | 9.6 (4154) | ||
| 14 | 13.6 (5226) | ||
| 15 | 12.0 (3806) | ||
| 16–17 | 15.8 (1214) | 0.75 [0.50, 1.13] | 0.75 [0.47, 1.20] |
| Gender | |||
| Female | 5.2 (9089) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Male | 22.0 (9279) | ||
| Parental smoking status | |||
| None | 9.6 (9648) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| One or both parents smokers | 17.3 (8805) | ||
| Best friends smokers | |||
| None | 4.0 (9445) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Some | 15.7 (7664) | ||
| Most or all | 53.5 (1627) | ||
| Perception that smoking is harmful | |||
| No | 27.7 (2362) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Yes | 11.5 (16309) |
aCI = Confidence Interval