| Literature DB >> 35886449 |
Tori L Horn1, Kathleen J Porter2, Kinsey N Pebley1, Rebecca A Krukowski2, Melissa A Little2.
Abstract
While tobacco use within the military is often discussed as being homogenously part of U.S. military culture, literature from civilian populations highlights that tobacco use varies by career field (e.g., "white collar" vs. "blue collar"). The objective of this qualitative study was to compare tobacco use by career fields in the U.S. Air Force. Airmen, Military Training Instructors, and Technical Training Instructors participated in 22 focus groups across five major Air Force Technical Training bases. Focus groups were conducted in-person using semi-structured interview guides and were audio-recorded. A conventional content-coding approach was used to code transcripts. Participants described substantial variation across the careers, which was attributed to social norms and the nature of jobs. Individuals in careers that spend most of their time outside were more likely to permit tobacco use. Conversely, tobacco use was seen as stigmatized in medical fields. Additionally, smokeless tobacco was identified as popular in certain careers because it could be used covertly on the job. Findings suggest that a one-size-fits-all approach to reducing tobacco use through policies and programs may not reflect the realities of military tobacco use. These findings may provide insights into other branches of the U.S. military with similar career fields.Entities:
Keywords: career; military; tobacco
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886449 PMCID: PMC9323384 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19148598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Identified Career Field Categories.
| Career Field Category | Description | Example Career Fields |
|---|---|---|
| Outdoor/Hands-on Jobs | Career fields in which Airmen work in hands-on careers that often provide them direct and frequent access to outdoor spaces. | Careers on the flight line |
| Indoor/Desk Jobs | Career fields that require Airmen to work indoors, often at specific workstations. | Intel |
| Medical | Career fields in which Airmen work in medical facilities. While most Airmen in this career field category have direct patient care, some do not as they maintain the medical and facility equipment. | Clinicians |
| Security Forces | Career fields in which Airmen are often outside on base patrol or guard duty. | Police |
Airmen’s Broad Perceptions of Tobacco Use in the Air Force and across Career Fields.
| Perception | Exemplar Quote |
|---|---|
| Tobacco use is part of Air Force and military culture |
“… because practically every career field…there are people smoking in it. It has been so engrained in military culture that they used to give cigarettes in MREs and not more than 25 years ago. So, to raise the Airmen up like, “Nobody in the military smokes. It is bad. You shouldn’t do it” and things like that, I feel like we are doing them a disservice because as soon as they get to their first duty station, things are much different.” |
| Tobacco use is not the same across career fields |
“I think it depends on where you are and what job you do. So, if you’re doing it as a social thing in Tech School, maybe in medical, when you get to your first job, you’re gonna be embarrassed and to the point where you’re gonna want to quit or you are gonna hide and do it in private. But if you’re Security Forces, CE [Civil Engineering], anything like that, yeah, you’re gonna do it.” “I think the job itself also plays a big role ‘cause my last base, I worked on an aircraft, working on [the] flight line all the time, so we have 12-h shifts. People were working night shift. We were allowed to smoke in front of airplanes, out on the flight line, like each spot for each plane has its own smoke spot, like 200 yards away. So, everybody’s out there smoking. You just see smoke just rolling by because it either helps them stay awake long hours. So, there was a lot of people doing that. But yeah, these individuals here, they work in an office inside, so limited access.” |
| Tobacco use rates may be higher in career fields that work outdoors and/or engage in hands-on tasks than those than are more “desk” or indoor oriented |
“It just depends on your career field. If you are in a career field where you are outside, like Maintenance and Security Forces or whatever, you are going to have more opportunities to smoke. If you are in an office setting or throughout the day than everybody else, then you are not going to be able to do that.” “Working inside, like you’re not gonna be able to smoke, but you’re already outside and I feel like you can just walk over there and just waste some time, mess around.” |
Figure 1Facilitators and Deterrents of Tobacco Use by Career Field.
Exemplar Quotes Describing Facilitators and Deterrents of Tobacco Use by Career Field.
| Career Category | Exemplar Quotes |
|---|---|
| Outdoor/Hands-On Jobs |
“I’m prior maintenance, so if you don’t smoke, then there’s something wrong with you.” “What we do in the hangar [use smokeless tobacco] directly correlates to what we’re going to be doing on the flight line in our jobs and we’re not going to have time for that [taking a break to smoke cigarettes].” “That’s why we [maintainers] dip, so we don’t have to stop.” “They say tobacco causes... dipping, tongue cancer; smoking, lung cancer. Well, 99 percent of the stuff that we do these days causes cancer. The jobs we do definitely cause cancer.” |
| Indoor/Desk Jobs |
“A lot of the intels are introverted, so they don’t like talking to people. … And I feel like using tobacco might be one way that they cope with things ‘cause they don’t want to talk to you, they don’t want to come see us to deal with their problems. … So, I think that they just gravitated towards the negative coping methods.” “I know for me if I didn’t smoke I would not take breaks, lunch, or anything, fact.” |
| Medical |
“Bio—we’re medical, too, but we’re not in the same building. A lot of the people I work with smoke a lot. Just constantly go outside and smoke and every 20 min, they’re smoking.” “And I don’t feel like that’s the culture at all in medical. I was ashamed about it, almost to the point, like I don’t tell people that I do even now. Because the people who I was working with in medical made it to a point where it was like you were disgusting.” “We’re just in a health field, so we all know that it’s not healthy to smoke, and then having our patient when we ask them, “Do you smoke? Do you drink?” One thing that always stands by me is like if I’m talking to someone and they smell like cigarettes, the perception of them is like, “I don’t really care what you’re telling me right now because you’re a smoker.” |
| Security Forces |
“I think security forces uses smoking as a way to get breaks because we don’t get breaks. We don’t sit an office where you can take a 10-min break, or you can go up to the gym, or you can take lunch, or whatever. BAS means “bring a sandwich” in security forces, so if you don’t have—let’s say you’re on a patrol. You might have a little bit more leeway. But if you’re on a static post, on a flight-line post, you don’t get any time, so people I think take up smoking.” “In security forces, it tends to be dip. I see a lot more people do dipping than smoke because you have to be able to, like, you have to be physically fit, like master sergeant said, you have to be able to run and dip. I can’t sit here and smoke to you, but I can sit here and dip and talk to you” “I just know with the security forces a lot of people do it just to socialize. It’s the cool thing to do. Sometimes people do it, like I said I did it because I was bored on deployments. It gave me something to do.” |