Psychosocial predictors of cigarette smoking among adolescents living in public housing developments
Jennifer A Epstein, Christopher Williams, Gilbert J Botvin, Tracy Diaz, Michelle Ifill-Williams
Institute for
Prevention Research, Department of Public Health, Cornell University
Medical College, New York, New York, USA
Correspondence to: Dr JA Epstein, Institute for Prevention Research, Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, 411 East 69th Street, KB 201, New York, NY 10021, USA; jepstein{at}mail.med.cornell.edu
BACKGROUND
Adolescents
residing in low-income public housing developments in inner-city
regions may be particularly vulnerable to a variety of risk factors
associated with cigarette smoking.
OBJECTIVE
To elucidate
the aetiology of cigarette smoking among adolescents living in public
housing developments.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND
SUBJECTS
We examined predictors of smoking from
four domains: background characteristics, social influences,
behavioural control, and psychosocial characteristics using a sample of
seventh graders (mean age 12.9 years) who reside in public housing
developments in New York City (n = 624). The addresses of participants
in a larger investigation of the aetiology and prevention of smoking were checked to determine if they lived in one of 335 public housing developments in New York City. All participants living in public housing developments were included in the current study.
MAIN OUTCOME
MEASURES
African-American and Hispanic students
completed questionnaires about their cigarette use, social pressures to
smoke, smoking attitudes, smoking knowledge, and smoking resistance
skills. Students also provided information on demographic and
behavioural control (such as church and school attendance).
RESULTS
Logistic
regression analyses indicated that social influences from friends and
family members predicted smoking. Psychosocial characteristics such as
advertising resistance skills, anti-smoking attitudes, and refusal
skills lowered the odds of smoking.
CONCLUSIONS
These
findings suggest that smoking prevention approaches targeted at these
young people should increase their awareness of social pressures to
smoke, correct misperceptions about the prevalence of smoking among
friends, and teach relevant psychosocial skills.
Keywords: smoking initiation predictors; smoking prevention; public housing developments; psychosocial risk factors
© 1999 by Tobacco Control
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