Short term patterns of early smoking acquisition
Open Access
- 25 August 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Tobacco Control
- Vol. 13 (3) , 251-257
- https://doi.org/10.1136/tc.2003.005595
Abstract
Objective: To describe short term patterns of smoking acquisition exhibited by adolescent smokers. Design: Interview records from the prospective development and assessment of nicotine dependence in youth study were examined retrospectively. Interviews were conducted three times per year over 30 months. Subjects: 164 students in grades 7–9 (ages 12–15 years, 86 girls, 78 boys) who had used cigarettes at least twice. Main outcome measures: A continuous timeline of smoking activity, beginning with the subject’s first use of tobacco and continuing through follow up, was translated into six patterns—abstinent, sporadic, occasional, daily, escalating, and intermittent. Outcome measures were the proportion of subjects starting/ending in each pattern, and the number of transitions per subject between patterns. Results: There was a general but discontinuous progression from infrequent to more frequent use, with many interspersed periods of not smoking. Escalation to daily smoking was common after the development of dependence symptoms, but was rare among those who did not have symptoms. After the appearance of symptoms, both transitions to heavier daily smoking and attempts at cessation increased. Conclusions: Movement to heavier, more frequent smoking is generally unidirectional, although many youths attempt to quit one or more times. The appearance of any symptom of dependence altered the subsequent pattern of smoking behaviour. Future investigators might consider using more frequent data points and a continuous timeline to track smoking behaviour.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The hardest thing is the habit: a qualitative investigation of adolescent smokers' experience of nicotine dependenceNicotine & Tobacco Research, 2002
- Pathways through adolescent smoking: A 7-year longitudinal grouping analysis.Health Psychology, 2002
- Identifying trajectories of adolescent smoking: An application of latent growth mixture modeling.Health Psychology, 2001
- A risk factor index predicting adolescent cigarette smoking: A 7-year longitudinal study.Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 2001
- Identifying trajectories of adolescent smoking: An application of latent growth mixture modeling.Health Psychology, 2001
- Initial symptoms of nicotine dependence in adolescentsTobacco Control, 2000
- The natural history of cigarette smoking from adolescence to adulthood in a midwestern community sample: Multiple trajectories and their psychosocial correlates.Health Psychology, 2000
- The natural history of cigarette smoking from adolescence to adulthood: Demographic predictors of continuity and change.Health Psychology, 1996
- Answering Autobiographical Questions: The Impact of Memory and Inference on SurveysScience, 1987
- The smoking problem: A review of the research and theory in behavioral risk modification.Psychological Bulletin, 1980