Literature DB >> 9583626

Smoking experimentation and initiation among adolescent girls: qualitative and quantitative findings.

M Nichter1, M Nichter1, N Vuckovic, G Quintero, C Ritenbaugh.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To use qualitative and quantitative findings to describe patterns of smoking experimentation and initiation among adolescent girls.
DESIGN: Ethnographic in-person interviews, focus groups, telephone interviews, and a survey questionnaire were used over a one-year period. The paper reports on cross-sectional data drawn from a three-year longitudinal study. SUBJECTS AND
SETTING: 205 girls participated in the survey and interviews during year 3 of the study. Girls were drawn from two urban high schools in Tucson, Arizona (USA), and were in grades 10 and 11 (mean ages 16 and 17, respectively) during year 3.
RESULTS: Overall, 30% (n = 61) of informants reported that they currently smoked, 7% (n = 15) were ex-smokers, and 63% (n = 129) were "non-smokers". The most frequently cited reasons for smoking were stress reduction and relaxation. Several stress-inducing situations, including family environment, social relations with classmates, and schoolwork, are discussed. The notion of peer pressure is re-examined in the light of teenagers' experience that there is little overt pressure to initiate smoking. Consonant with notions of adolescent autonomy, the theme of independence in smoking initiation and continuation permeated girls' narratives about their smoking behaviour. Girls projected the image that they could control their cigarettes rather than have their cigarettes control them.
CONCLUSIONS: Smoking prevention and cessation programmes need to address and counter the smoking/relaxation association, which was identified as an important reason for smoking among adolescent girls. Questions typically used in surveys to measure smoking behaviour do not adequately define the smoking experience as described by teenagers.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9583626      PMCID: PMC1759584          DOI: 10.1136/tc.6.4.285

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tob Control        ISSN: 0964-4563            Impact factor:   7.552


  29 in total

1.  Teens' images of smoking and smokers.

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2.  Stereotyping the smoker: adolescents' appraisals of smokers in film.

Authors:  J P McCool; L Cameron; K Petrie
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4.  Does the association between different dimension of social capital and adolescent smoking vary by socioeconomic status? a pooled cross-national analysis.

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5.  Taking play seriously: low-level smoking among college students.

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6.  Are the recommended taxonomies for the stages of youth smoking onset consistent with youth's perceptions of their smoking status?

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7.  Adolescents report both positive and negative consequences of experimentation with cigarette use.

Authors:  Sonya S Brady; Anna V Song; Bonnie L Halpern-Felsher
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8.  Adolescent smoking networks: the effects of influence and selection on future smoking.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Hall; Thomas W Valente
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Review 9.  Stress is a principal factor that promotes tobacco use in females.

Authors:  Oscar V Torres; Laura E O'Dell
Journal:  Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2015-04-22       Impact factor: 5.067

10.  Associations between smoking and extreme dieting among adolescents.

Authors:  Dong-Chul Seo; Nan Jiang
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2009-06-07
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