Do social characteristics influence smoking uptake and cessation during young adulthood?
Cessation
Male
Canada
Bourdieu
Smoking
Friends
Social characteristics
3. Good health
Cohort Studies
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
Logistic Models
0302 clinical medicine
Socioeconomic Factors
Humans
Female
Smoking Cessation
Peer Influence
Smoking onset
Young adults
DOI:
10.1007/s00038-017-1044-8
Publication Date:
2017-10-29T03:16:45Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
This study uses a Bourdieusian approach to assess young adults' resources and examines their association with smoking initiation and cessation.Data were drawn from 1450 young adults participating in the Interdisciplinary Study of Inequalities in Smoking, a cohort study in Montreal, Canada. We used logistic regression models to examine the association between young adults' income, education, and peer smoking at baseline and smoking onset and cessation.Young adults where most or all of their friends smoked had greater odds of smoking onset. Young adults that had completed pre-university postsecondary education also had higher odds of smoking onset after controlling for social support, employment status, and lacking money to pay for expenses. Income and the sociodemographic variables age and sex were not associated with smoking onset. Young adults where half of their friends smoked or where most to all of their friends smoked had lowers odds of smoking cessation. Men were more likely to cease smoking than women. Education, income and age were not associated with cessation.Interventions focusing on peer smoking may present promising avenues for tobacco prevention in young adults.
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