Regular ArticleCognitive Susceptibility to Smoking and Initiation of Smoking during Childhood: A Longitudinal Study☆,☆☆
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Cited by (143)
Measurement and predictive value of susceptibility to cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cigars, and hookah among Texas adolescents
2018, Addictive Behaviors ReportsCitation Excerpt :These trends and the growing popularity of specific products call for identifying risk factors that predict product use initiation. Numerous studies have demonstrated susceptibility to cigarettes among never smoking adolescents is associated with increased risk of experimentation with cigarettes and becoming an established smoker (Jackson, 1998; Jackson & Dickinson, 2004; Nodora et al., 2014; Pierce, Choi, Gilpin, Farkas, & Merritt, 1996; Pierce, Distefan, Kaplan, & Gilpin, 2005; Spelman et al., 2009; Strong et al., 2015; Unger, Johnson, Stoddard, Nezami, & Chou, 1997). Limited research suggests that susceptibility to e-cigarettes or hookah independently predicts future e-cigarette (Bold, Kong, Cavallo, Camenga, & Krishnan-Sarin, 2017) or hookah use (Lipkus, Reboussin, Wolfson, & Sutfin, 2015), respectively, and that susceptibility to cigarettes predicts future e-cigarette and cigar use (Cole, Kennedy, Chaurasia, & Leatherdale, 2017).
Testing competing explanations for graphic warning label effects among adult smokers and non-smoking youth
2018, Social Science and MedicineCognitive risk factors of electronic and combustible cigarette use in adolescents
2018, Addictive BehaviorsPerformance of cigarette susceptibility index among e-cigarette and hookah users
2018, Drug and Alcohol DependenceCitation Excerpt :‘Susceptibility to smoking’ – the absence of a firm commitment not to smoke − is thought to be a key proximal mediator of smoking initiation risk that is malleable and, therefore, amenable to intervention to prevent initiation (Choi et al., 2001). A composite measure of susceptibility to smoking initiation, initially developed in the early 1990s, has included questionnaire items assessing intention to smoke and willingness to smoke if offered by a friend (Choi et al., 2001; Jackson, 1998; Pierce et al., 1996; Unger et al., 1997) and more recently, curiosity about smoking (Nodora et al., 2014; Pierce et al., 2005; Strong et al., 2014). This research has aimed to identify youth at risk of initiating cigarette use (i.e., those cognitively susceptible to smoking initiation [for example, not protected from social influences to smoke] but who have not yet initiated use).
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This research was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Grant DA07919.
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P, McGrathP, Firestone, editors
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