| Literature DB >> 26308307 |
E Melinda Mahabee-Gittens1, Bin Huang, Chen Chen, Lorah D Dorn, Robert T Ammerman, Judith S Gordon.
Abstract
Little attention has been paid to understanding how parents of differing race/ethnicity perceive their effectiveness in exercising anti-smoking parenting practices and how these behaviors affect youth's smoking intentions. We explored the association of parent-youth connectedness and parental self-efficacy and youths' smoking intentions in a group of African American and Caucasian never-smokers. Based on Social Bonding Theory and Social Learning Theory, a questionnaire was administered to nonsmoking, 9-16-year-old youth and parent dyads, assessing youth smoking intentions and parental measures of connectedness and self-efficacy. Youth risk factors for intending to smoke were increased parent-youth conflict and protective factors were increased parental monitoring, increased parental rule setting, and higher parental self-efficacy. Parent-youth connectedness and parental self-efficacy did not differ by parental smoking status or by race/ethnicity. Our findings underscore the importance of strong parenting practices and parental self-efficacy in protecting against youth intention to smoke and these may be important to target in future interventions.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; parenting; prevention; smoking
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 26308307 PMCID: PMC6404760 DOI: 10.1080/10852352.2011.576962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prev Interv Community ISSN: 1085-2352