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The effectiveness of a health education programme for prevention of alcohol abuse and tobacco smoking among adolescents was assessed by an intervention study with a non-randomized control group. The study was carried out among 7th-9th grade school students in a Local Health Unit of the Brescia province, North Italy. Students were enrolled in either the intervention or the control group, based on the participation of their teachers to the educational programme. A total of 428 students were involved in the programme representing the intervention group, and 658 students not involved in the programme formed the control group. The health education programme included the prevention of alcohol abuse in the first school year (1989-90) and the prevention of tobacco smoking in the second year (1990-91). Each part of the programme included a series of lessons taken by the teachers for about 20 hours. Alcohol use and smoking habits, knowledge about, and attitudes toward alcohol and tobacco use of the students have been assessed by anonymous questionnaires. The questionnaires have been administered during school time at the beginning and the end of each school year, giving a total of 6 questionnaires, from Q1 to Q6. All the questionnaires included the same questions on alcohol and tobacco use, knowledge and attitudes. Of the 1086 students who attended the 7th grade in the year 1989-90, 428 were enrolled as intervention group and 658 as control group. As regards alcohol, the following findings were observed: 1. no difference was found in the percentages of students drinking at least one glass of wine or beer daily between the 2 groups at Q6; 2. no substantial change in the percentage of students aware of the health risks of alcohol abuse from Q1 to Q6 was observed. As regards tobacco smoking, the results of the study showed: 1. no difference between the 2 groups was found at Q6 as regards the proportion of students who smoked one or more cigarettes a month; 2. the percentages of students planning to smoke in the future were similar in the 2 groups in Q6; 3.the percentage of students with a high score on the health consequences of smoking was higher in the intervention than the control group at Q4, but again no difference between the groups was evident at Q6. In conclusion, the health education programme seemed to be unsuccessful in modifying behaviors and attitudes regarding alcohol and tobacco use during the 3-year follow-up.  相似文献   

3.
Of 66 24–58 yr old smokers in 2 worksites, 67% participated in a smoking cessation program. 55% completed the program. Of those, 29% had quit smoking by posttest, and 17% were abstinent at the 6-mo follow-up. Different variables predicted participation, attrition, and outcome. Significant predictors of smokers who participated were length of cessation in previous abstinence attempts, number of years they smoked, and belief regarding personal vulnerability in contracting a smoking-related disease. Levels of pretest carbon monoxide and attitudes regarding adoption of smoking restrictions in the worksite predicted attrition. Posttest cessation was related to nicotine levels of cigarette brand smoked at pretest and pretest beliefs regarding postcessation weight gain. Abstinence at the 6-mo follow-up was predicted by number of co-workers who smoked and pretest concerns related to postcessation weight gain. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

4.
From 1436 pupils in North-Switzerland 9% of the boys and 3% of the girls smoked their first cigarette within or before the age of six years. 32% of these first cigarettes were smoked in woods or parks. 37% on streets, 31% on other places. 25% of the first cigarettes were stolen, not bought. 50% of all these children remembered to have a headache, vomitying or a stomach-ache after smoking the first cigarette. The boys began to smoke daily at the age of 13, the girls at the age of 14.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: The prevalence and correlates of early smoking were investigated among schoolchildren in grades 4-6 living in multiethnic, low-income neighborhoods in Montreal. METHODS: As part of the evaluation of a school-based heart health promotion program, baseline data on the prevalence of early smoking were collected from 2285 students aged 9-13 years in 24 inner-city elementary schools during May-June 1993. RESULTS: Overall, 28.7% of boys and 20.3% of girls had smoked. Girls began trying later than boys, but by age 13 the prevalence of experimental or regular smoking by girls overtook that of boys. Univariately, ever smoking varied considerably by family origin, from 2.1% among Vietnamese girls, to 35.8% among Portuguese boys. In multivariate analysis, age, perceived smoking habits of friends, and smoking by family members, were strong correlates of smoking. Being of Asian family origin was negatively associated with smoking. None of the indicators of social class were significantly associated with ever smoking. CONCLUSIONS: Smoking prevention should begin with children even younger than age 9 in multiethnic, low-income, inner-city neighborhoods. With the exception of a lower prevalence of smoking among Asian children, ethnicity and social class were not strong influences on early smoking behavior in this population.  相似文献   

6.
A sample of 9th-grade students (1,293 individuals, 51% girls) attending compulsory schools in Reykjavik, Iceland, was surveyed and followed up 3 years later. The relationship between perceived control and substance use is examined concurrently at age 14 for experimentation with tobacco and alcohol and longitudinally (14–17 years of age) for daily smoking, heavy drinking, and illicit drug use. Taking into account sociodemographic characteristics (family structure, socioeconomic status, and gender) and parental and peer use, the results of concurrent analyses indicate that adolescents who expressed more personal control were less likely to have smoked and to have had a drink at age 14. Longitudinal analyses showed that perceived control at age 14 predicted both daily smoking and illicit drug use among girls at age 17 but not among boys. Conversely, perceived control did not predict heavy drinking among adolescents. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

7.
Objective: Secondhand smoke exposure is associated with asthma onset and exacerbation. Latino children have higher rates of asthma morbidity than other groups. The current study compared the effectiveness of a newly developed smoking cessation treatment with existing clinical guidelines for smoking cessation. Method: Latino caregivers who smoked (N = 133; 72.9% female; mean age = 36.8 years) and had a child with asthma were randomly assigned to receive 1 of 2 smoking cessation counseling interventions during a home-based asthma program: (a) behavioral action model (BAM; modeled on clinical guidelines for smoking cessation) or (b) precaution adoption model (PAM; feedback on the caregiver’s carbon monoxide level and child’s secondhand smoke exposure using Motivational Interviewing). Counseling was delivered by a bilingual Latina health educator, and the content was tailored to Latino values and culture. It was not necessary for smokers to want to quit smoking to participate. Smoking cessation was biochemically verified and secondhand smoke exposure was objectively measured through passive nicotine monitors. Results: Intent-to-treat analyses showed that 20.5% of participants in the PAM condition and 9.1% of those in the BAM condition were continuously abstinent at 2 months posttreatment (OR = 2.54; 95% CI = 0.91–7.10), whereas 19.1% of participants in the PAM condition and 12.3% of those in BAM condition were continuously abstinent at 3 months posttreatment (OR = 1.68; 95% CI = 0.64–4.37). Secondhand smoke exposure decreased only in the BAM condition (p p  相似文献   

8.
Prevalence of smoking was studied in two secondary schools in Zagreb. Data were collected from 637 pupils by questionnaires. Depending on school, between 31 to 45% pupils smoke. Different trends were observed in boys and girls. In boys from the families of a higher parental education prevalence is 28%; in those from lower 42% (p < 0.02). Smoking in girls still increases: in both populations girls surpassed boys (p < 0.001): observed frequencies are 47% in lower and 40% in a group with higher parental education. Higher frequency of smoking was observed in smoking families (p < 0.001). A majority of smokers begin smoking in the last grade of primary school, mostly because of peer group pressure and curiosity. Approximately 50% of regular smokers smoke more than half a pack daily. They comprise 12% of the surveyed population. Smokers do not assign low risk to smoking any more, but knowledge about diseases connected with smoking is insufficient. To reduce smoking among adolescents it is necessary to create negative attitude toward smoking and social-resistance skills during primary school education.  相似文献   

9.
CONTEXT: Adolescent smoking prevalence is tracked annually and has increased since 1991. In contrast, little is known about trends in smoking among college students, a group that has previously been more resistant to tobacco use than other young adults. OBJECTIVE: To examine changes in cigarette smoking among college students between 1993 and 1997 and among different types of students and colleges. DESIGN: Self-administered survey (Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study). SETTING: One hundred sixteen nationally representative 4-year colleges. SUBJECTS: A total of 15103 randomly selected students in 1993 (70% response rate) and 14251 students in 1997 (60% response rate). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reports of cigarette smoking in the past 30 days and in the past year, age at smoking first cigarette, and number of attempts to quit. RESULTS: Over 4 years, the prevalence of current (30-day) cigarette smoking rose by 27.8%, from 22.3% to 28.5% (P<.001). The increase was observed in 99 of 116 colleges and was statistically significant (P<.05) in 27 (23%) of them. Current smoking increased across all student subgroups (defined by sex, race/ethnicity, and year in school) and in all types of colleges. Smoking is rising faster in public schools (from 22.0% to 29.3%) than in private schools (from 22.9% to 26.8%). Eleven percent of college smokers had their first cigarette and 28% began to smoke regularly at or after age 19 years, by which time most were already in college. Half of current smokers tried to quit in the previous year; 18% had made 5 or more attempts to quit. CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette use is increasing on campuses nationwide in all subgroups and types of colleges. Substantial numbers of college students are both starting to smoke regularly and trying to stop. National efforts to reduce smoking should be extended to college students.  相似文献   

10.
Cigarette smoking poses significant risk to mother and infant during pregnancy and the postpartum period. Recruitment of pregnant smokers to intervention studies has often been reactive and has excluded certain subgroups of women, such as those who have recently quit smoking. In this study, we examined smoking patterns among a proactively recruited sample of women presenting to six urban community maternity clinics. The current report describes the patterns of smoking in this population of ethnoculturally diverse low-income urban pregnant women and examines differences across subgroups. The majority of the total sample in the current study reported that they had never smoked. Of the total, 30% reported having "ever" smoked and 16% were current smokers. Of the group of "ever" smokers, 18% quit greater than 12 months before pregnancy, 5% quit 0-12 months before pregnancy and 23% quit during this pregnancy. On the average, women who quit during pregnancy did so about 5 weeks after diagnosis. Of those women who continued to smoke during pregnancy, the average number of cigarettes smoked per day was 10 +/- 8. Differences were found in smoking patterns across the ethnocultural subgroups. Recruitment represents the first and one of the most important phases in intervening with pregnant women. Inclusion of both current smokers and recent self-quitters takes the fullest advantage of the window of opportunity to help women quit smoking and remain cigarette free for good.  相似文献   

11.
Objective: Individuals may desire to diet or restrain from eating certain foods while attempting to quit smoking out of concern for weight gain. However, previous research and clinical tobacco treatment guidelines suggest that concurrent dieting may undermine attempts to quit smoking. The current study applied the self-control strength model, which posits that self-regulation relies on a limited strength that is consumed with use, to test whether resisting tempting sweets would lead to a greater likelihood of subsequent smoking. Design: Participants were 101 cigarette smokers randomly assigned to resist eating either from a tempting plate of sweets or from a plate of less tempting vegetables. All participants were then given a 10-min recess. Main Outcome Measures: Whether participants smoked during the break, measured with a breath carbon monoxide sample, served as the primary dependent variable. Results: As predicted, participants who resisted sweets were more likely to smoke during the break (53.2%) than those who resisted vegetables (34.0%), χ2(1, N = 101) = 3.65 p  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The main premature mortality causes among youngsters are related to risk behaviors, usually initiated in adolescence. The study objective is to describe substance use and sexual behaviours among 10th-grade Barcelona students in 1996 (last year of compulsory education), as well as the interrelations between these variables and several sociodemographic variables. METHODS: Cross sectional study. Random sample including 35 10th grade classrooms (958 students whose mean age is 15.8 years old) stratified by academic or vocational studies, public or private school, school neighbourhood socioeconomical level and school size. Measurement instrument is a previously validated questionnaire. Tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis consumption, sexual intercourse as well as gender, age, weekly available money, parental instruction and type of studies are studied. Bivariate chi 2 analysis and multivariate gender specific log-linear model are performed. RESULTS: 27% of the students smoke daily and 31% drink alcohol weekly. 15% have had sexual intercourse, and among those 79% use always or almost always condoms. Among girls tobacco consumption is related to alcohol (OR = 4.2), to cannabis (OR = 5.9) and sexual intercourse (OR = 3.9), and, less strongly, with age, available money and vocational studies. Alcohol is associated with tobacco and cannabis use (OR = 4.2). Having had sexual intercourse is related to tobacco use, age (OR = 3.4), vocational studies (OR = 2.4) and cannabis experience (OR = 2.8). Among boys tobacco consumption is related to alcohol, (OR = 2.7), to cannabis (OR = 7.6) and sexual intercourse (OR = 4.4), and, less strongly, to available money and type of studies. Alcohol consumption is associated with tobacco and cannabis use (OR = 5.5). Sexual intercourse is related to tobacco use and age (OR = 2.5). DISCUSSION: Risk behaviors among final year secondary school students are strongly and significantly interrelated, both among boys and among girls, and are more frequent among older students, those with more money available and those in vocational curricula.  相似文献   

13.
Canadian schools that train health professionals were asked to evaluate the amount of teaching of counselling skills to prevent clients from starting smoking or to help them quit, the topics covered, the knowledge and counselling skill level of their graduates and whether an integrated smoking counselling program was needed for their school. Responses to a questionnaire were received from the Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Studies, the Assistant Dean of Postgraduate Studies and/or the Postgraduate Program Director of 165 professional schools or departments of 283 contacted (58% response rate). For those schools that replied that they taught counselling about smoking, they devoted more hours in the curriculum (range 1-11 hours) to education about the diseases caused by smoking than to counselling children or adults against smoking or helping smokers to quit. Nursing schools tended to have integrated health education curricula, and it was therefore difficult for them to identify the hours devoted exclusively to counselling about tobacco. Few of the deans or program directors of any of the professional schools estimated the knowledge and counselling skills of their graduates as superior, and a majority felt that an integrated smoking counselling curriculum was needed for their school.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to examine the relationship between religious activities and cigarette smoking in community-dwelling older adults. METHODS: Cigarette smoking and religious activities were assessed in a probability sample of 3968 persons age 65 years or older participating in the Duke Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (EPESE) survey. Participants were asked if they currently smoked, if they ever smoked, and how many cigarettes per day they smoked. Attendance at religious services, participation in private religious activities (prayer or Bible study), and use of religious media (religious TV or radio) were also assessed. Data were available for Waves I-III of the survey (1986, 1989, and 1992). Analyses were controlled for age, race, sex, education, alcohol use, physical health, and in the longitudinal analyses, smoking status at prior waves. RESULTS: Cross-sectional analyses revealed that participants who frequently attended religious services were significantly less likely to smoke cigarettes at all three waves. Likewise, elders frequently involved in private religious activity were less likely to smoke (Waves II and III). Total number of pack-years smoked was also inversely related to both attendance at religious services and private religious activities. Watching religious TV or listening to religious radio, on the other hand, was not related to smoking at Waves I and II nor to total pack-years smoked, but was positively related to current smoking at Wave III. Among those who smoked, number of cigarettes smoked was inversely related to frequency of attendance at religious services (Wave I), private religious activities (Wave III), and religious TV/radio (Waves II and III). Retrospective and prospective analyses revealed that religiously active persons were less likely to ever start smoking, not more likely to quit smoking. CONCLUSIONS: Religiously active persons are less likely to smoke cigarettes, and if they do smoke, smoke fewer cigarettes. Given the association between smoking and disease, and the widespread prevalence of both smoking and religious activity, this finding has implications for public health.  相似文献   

15.
Smokers aged 50 years and older are a vulnerable group of patients, who are likely to have ailments that are complicated by smoking. They can derive significant health benefits from quitting, even though they probably have smoked for many years and are highly addicted. With older patients making multiple office visits each year, doctors can play a pivotal role in helping older smokers to quit. By following a four-step approach--ask about smoking, advise to quit, assist the patient in developing a quitting plan, and arrange for follow-up--physicians can significantly improve the health of their older patients who smoke.  相似文献   

16.
Cigarette smokers with a mean history of 35 smoking years (N?=?98) were randomly assigned to receive either 3 weeks or 12 weeks of transdermal nicotine treatment combined with a 5-session behavioral management program. Participants were followed for 20 weeks. At the conclusion of the study, 26% of the 3-week participants and 29% of the 12-week participants were abstinent. The number of abstinent participants and duration of abstinence were not significantly different between the 2 groups, although statistical power constraints do not rule out the possibility of small undetected differences in outcome. Most participants (68%) smoked at least once during their nicotine patch regimen. Smoking on the patch was associated with poor outcome. Those who smoked while using the patch reported more restlessness and cigarette cravings and lower confidence and intention to quit smoking than did participants who did not smoke during the drug regimen. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

17.
Sex differences in predictors of smoking cessation were investigated among 337 male and 490 female participants in the RAND adolescent panel study. Participants reported smoking at least 11–20 times during the past year at Grade 10, with cessation defined as not smoking during the past year at Grade 12. Controlling for demographics, sex-specific analyses indicated that girls who quit smoking within 2 years had friends who smoked less frequently, perceived less parental approval of their smoking, had weaker intentions to continue smoking, used marijuana less frequently, attended fewer different schools, were more likely to have an intact nuclear family, experienced greater peer support, and rated themselves as healthier. Similar analyses for boys yielded results that were generally weaker and nonsignificant, with smoking quantity accounting for several associations in the sex-specific models. Despite these differences, interaction tests revealed significant sex differences for only three predictors. Implications of these results for understanding adolescent smoking cessation are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

18.
Objective: To examine the effects of normative influences on adolescent smoking in Greece, a country with weak social norms against smoking and relatively ineffective tobacco control policies. Design: A cross-sectional survey methodology was employed, and a representative sample of Greek high school students was recruited (N = 1,920, M age = 14 years). Main Outcome Measures: Normative beliefs, attitudes, perceived behavioral control, self-esteem, and intentions to smoke. Results: Multiple-regression and mediation analyses were conducted. The effects of public smoking on intentions to smoke were mediated by beliefs of perceived prevalence of smoking among peers, subjective norms, and situational temptations. Self-esteem significantly moderated the effects of subjective norms on intentions to smoke. Conclusions: Prosmoking norms in one’s environment become internalized into biased normative beliefs about smoking, and increase susceptibility to smoke under social pressure. The effect of subjective norms on intentions to smoke was stronger among adolescents with low self-esteem, suggesting that self-esteem may act as a vulnerability factor in the process of smoking initiation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

19.
This study examined how parenting factors were associated with adolescent problem behaviors among urban minority youth and to what extent these relationships were moderated by family structure and gender. 228 6th grade students reported how often they use alcohol, smoke cigarettes, or engage in aggressive or delinquent behaviors; a parent or guardian reported their monitoring and other parenting practices. Findings indicated that boys and those from single-parent families engaged in the highest rates of problem behavior. More parental monitoring was associated with less delinquency overall, as well as less drinking in boys only. Eating family dinners together was associated with less aggression overall, as well as less delinquency in youth from single-parent families and in girls. Unsupervised time at home alone was associated with more smoking for girls only. Implications for prevention interventions are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

20.
Risk factors for the initiation of cigarette smoking were examined in 2 consecutive cohorts of teenagers (N?=?1,901). Students in Cohort 1 were followed over 4 years from 9th to 12th grade; those in Cohort 2 were followed over 3 years from 9th to 11th grade. Among girls with no history of smoking at baseline, those with more friends who smoked at baseline (p?p?p?p?  相似文献   

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