Self-initiated smoking cessation among high school students☆
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Cited by (58)
Testing Social Cognitive Theory as a theoretical framework to predict smoking relapse among daily smoking adolescents
2009, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :As such, SCT offers a theoretical framework to examine smoking behaviour. Several studies have demonstrated that adult smokers' perceptions of the pros and cons of smoking and quitting affect their quitting behaviour (De Vries & Backbier, 1994; Dijkstra, De Vries, & Bakker, 1996; Greening, 1997; Hansen, Collins, Johnson, & Graham, 1985; Prochaska, DiClemente, & Norcross, 1992; Rose, Chassin, Presson, & Sherman, 1996). Individuals who report to attribute relatively few advantages to smoking and many benefits to quitting are more likely to achieve smoking cessation.
Mechanisms of adolescent smoking cessation: Roles of readiness to quit, nicotine dependence, and smoking of parents and peers
2009, Drug and Alcohol DependenceTelephone counseling to implement best parenting practices to prevent adolescent problem behaviors
2008, Contemporary Clinical TrialsCitation Excerpt :We also asked about availability of cigarettes and alcohol in the home. Rebelliousness was measured using the validated [38] 6 item teen rebelliousness scale (α = 0.65) used in previous research [39–42]Depressive Symptoms: was measured with the 6 item (α = 0.78) Kandel's Depressive Symptoms Scale [43]. For Academic Performance, we asked teens to classify how they performed in school.
The effects of providing lung age and respiratory symptoms feedback on community college smokers' perceived smoking-related health risks, worries and desire to quit
2007, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :Consistent with these theories, youth who have higher perceived smoking-related risks (e.g., negative health expectancies) are less likely to initiate, experiment with, and regularly use tobacco (Flay et al., 1994; Flay, Phil, Hu, & Richardson, 1998; Leventhal, Glynn, & Fleming, 1987). Further, greater perceived risk and negative smoking expectancies have been related to a greater desire to quit, quit attempts and maintenance of cessation (Hansen, Collins, Johnson, & Graham, 1985; Milam, Sussman, Ritt-Olson, & Dent, 2000; Rose, Chassin, Presson, & Sherman, 1996; Riedel, Robinson, Klesges, & McLain-Allen, 2002; Romer & Jamieson, 2001). Theoretical models linking perceptions of risk and affect, such as “risk as feeling” and the “affect heuristic,” suggest reciprocal relationships between risk perceptions and affect (Loewenstein, Weber, Hsee, & Welch, 2001; Slovic, Finucane, Peters, & MacGregor, 2004).
The meaning of smoking as health and social risk in adolescence
2006, Journal of Adolescence
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This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, grant number 1-RO1-DAO2941.