Department of Counseling and Educational Psychology, Center for Research and Development in Education, Okayama University, 3-1-1 Tsushimanaka, Okayama 700-8530, Japan.
Biopsychosoc Med. 2007 Jul 4;1:13. doi: 10.1186/1751-0759-1-13.
Smoking and drinking alcohol among early adolescents are serious public health concerns, but few studies have been conducted in Japan to assess their prevalence and etiology. A regional survey was conducted in eight schools in two Japanese school districts to identify psychosocial factors associated with smoking and drinking behaviors for boys and girls.
Junior high school students from seventh to ninth grades (N = 2,923) completed a self-reported questionnaire between December 2002 and March 2003. Relationships between psychosocial variables (i.e., self-assertive efficacy to resist peer pressure, parental involvement, school adjustment, and deviant peer influence) and smoking and drinking were investigated using logistic regression analyses and path analyses.
Smoking in the last six months was significantly more prevalent in boys (7.9%) than girls (5.1%). The prevalence of drinking in the last six months was similar in boys (23.7%) and girls (21.8%). Self-efficacy to resist peer pressure was negatively associated with both smoking and drinking among both boys and girls and provided both direct and indirect effects through deviant peer influence. Parental involvement showed indirect effects through school adjustment and/or deviant peer influence to both smoking among both boys and girls and drinking among girls, although parental involvement showed direct effects on smoking only for boys. School adjustment was negatively associated with smoking among both boys and girls and drinking among girls.
These findings suggest that self-assertive efficacy to resist peer pressure, parental involvement, school adjustment and deviant peer influence are potentially important factors that could be addressed by programs to prevent smoking and/or drinking among early adolescent boys and girls in Japan.
青少年吸烟和饮酒是严重的公共卫生问题,但日本对此类问题的流行情况和病因学研究较少。本研究对两个日本学区的 8 所学校的青少年进行了区域性调查,以确定与男孩和女孩吸烟和饮酒行为相关的社会心理因素。
2002 年 12 月至 2003 年 3 月,初中 7 至 9 年级学生(n=2923)完成了一份自我报告问卷。采用逻辑回归分析和路径分析,调查了社会心理变量(即抵制同伴压力的自信、父母参与、学校适应和偏差同伴影响)与吸烟和饮酒的关系。
最近 6 个月男生(7.9%)吸烟的比例显著高于女生(5.1%)。最近 6 个月男生(23.7%)和女生(21.8%)饮酒的比例相似。抵制同伴压力的自信与男孩和女孩的吸烟和饮酒均呈负相关,并通过偏差同伴影响提供了直接和间接影响。父母参与通过学校适应和/或偏差同伴影响对男孩和女孩的吸烟以及女孩的饮酒均有间接影响,但父母参与对男孩的吸烟仅有直接影响。学校适应与男孩和女孩的吸烟以及女孩的饮酒呈负相关。
这些发现表明,抵制同伴压力的自信、父母参与、学校适应和偏差同伴影响可能是日本预防青少年男孩和女孩吸烟和/或饮酒的重要因素。