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Trajectories of smoking among freshmen college students with prior smoking history and risk for future smoking: data from the University Project Tobacco Etiology Research Network (UpTERN) study

Authors :
Eisuke Segawa
Robert L. Balster
Brian P. Flaherty
Mimi Nichter
David B. Abrams
Ronald E. Dahl
Kathleen R. Merikangus
Stephen T. Tiffany
Craig R. Colder
Richard R. Clayton
Gary A. Giovino
Saul Shiffman
Eric C. Donny
Lisa Dierker
Lorah D. Dorn
Jack E. Henningfield
Thomas Eissenberg
Elizabeth E. Loyd-Richardson
Lan Liang
Dennis Prager
Brian R. Flay
Robert J. McMahon
Laura R. Stroud
George F. Koob
Linda M. Collins
William G. Shadel
Christopher R. Agnew
Donald Hedeker
Mark Nichter
Source :
Addiction. 103:1534-1543
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Wiley, 2008.

Abstract

Aims Little is known about smoking during the transition to college. The current study examined trajectories of smoking among college freshmen, how trajectories predicted later smoking and the social context of smoking. Design Weekly assessments of daily smoking were collected via the web during the first year of college for a large cohort with a previous history of smoking. Participants and setting A total of 193 college freshmen from a large public university with a previous history of smoking who smoked frequently enough to be included in trajectory analysis.Measurements Measuresincludedweeklyreportsof dailysmoking,familysmoking,perceivedpeerattitudes and smoking, social norms and social smoking environment. Findings Seven trajectories were identified: one of low-level sporadic smoking, one of low-level smoking with a small increase during the year, two classes with a substantial decrease during the year, two classes with relatively small decreases and one class with a substantial increase in smoking. Trajectories of smoking in the freshman year predicted levels of sophomore year smoking, and some social context variables tended to change as smoking increased or decreased for a given trajectory class. Conclusions The transition into college is marked by changes in smoking, with smoking escalating for some students andcontinuingintothesophomoreyear.Shiftsinsocialcontextthatsupportsmokingwereassociatedwithtrajectories of smoking. Despite the focus of developmental models on smoking in early adolescence, the transition into college warrants further investigation as a dynamic period for smoking.

Details

ISSN :
13600443 and 09652140
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Addiction
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c27f3cf33359d32e7b27fce0c790f965