Collins Bradley N, Wileyto E Paul, Murphy Michael F G, Munafò Marcus R
Health Behavior Research Clinic, Department of Public Health, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, USA.
J Adolesc Health. 2007 Oct;41(4):363-70. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2007.04.010. Epub 2007 Jul 12.
Research has linked prenatal tobacco exposure to neurocognitive and behavioral problems that can disrupt learning and school performance in childhood. Less is known about its effects on academic achievement in adolescence when controlling for known confounding factors (e.g., environmental tobacco smoke [ETS]). We hypothesized that prenatal tobacco exposure would decrease the likelihood of passing academic achievement tests taken at 16 and 18 years of age.
This study was a longitudinal analysis of birth cohort data including 6,380 pregnant women and offspring from the 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS). Academic pass/fail performance was measured on British standardized achievement tests ("Ordinary Level" [O-Level] and Advanced Level: [A-Level]). Prenatal tobacco exposure plus controlling variables (ETS, teen offspring smoking and gender, maternal age at pregnancy, maternal smoking before pregnancy, and socioeconomic status) were included in regression models predicting O- and A-Level test failure.
Significant predictors of test failure in the O-Level model included exposure to maternal (OR = 0.71, p < .0001) and paternal (OR = 0.70, p < .0001) ETS, as well as teen smoking, female gender, and lower SES. Prenatal tobacco exposure did not influence failure. Similar factors emerged in the A-Level model except that male gender contributed to likelihood of failure. Prenatal exposure remained nonsignificant.
Our model suggests that adolescent exposure to ETS, not prenatal tobacco exposure, predicted failure on both O- and A-Level achievement tests when controlling for other factors known to influence achievement. Although this study has limitations, results bolster growing evidence of academic-related ETS consequences in adolescence.
研究表明,产前接触烟草与神经认知和行为问题有关,这些问题会干扰儿童时期的学习和学业表现。在控制已知的混杂因素(如环境烟草烟雾[ETS])时,其对青少年学业成绩的影响知之甚少。我们假设产前接触烟草会降低在16岁和18岁时通过学业成绩测试的可能性。
本研究是对出生队列数据的纵向分析,包括来自1958年全国儿童发展研究(NCDS)的6380名孕妇及其后代。学业通过/未通过表现通过英国标准化成就测试(“普通水平”[O-Level]和高级水平[A-Level])来衡量。回归模型中纳入了产前接触烟草以及控制变量(ETS、青少年后代吸烟和性别、母亲怀孕时的年龄、母亲怀孕前吸烟情况以及社会经济地位),以预测O-Level和A-Level测试未通过情况。
O-Level模型中测试未通过的显著预测因素包括接触母亲(OR = 0.71,p <.0001)和父亲(OR = 0.70,p <.0001)的ETS,以及青少年吸烟、女性性别和较低的社会经济地位。产前接触烟草并未影响测试未通过情况。A-Level模型中出现了类似的因素,只是男性性别增加了测试未通过的可能性。产前接触仍然不显著。
我们的模型表明,在控制其他已知影响成绩的因素时,青少年接触ETS而非产前接触烟草,可预测O-Level和A-Level成绩测试未通过情况。尽管本研究存在局限性,但结果支持了越来越多关于青少年与学业相关的ETS后果的证据。