Schnohr Christina W, Kreiner Svend, Rasmussen Mette, Due Pernille, Currie Candace, Diderichsen Finn
Section of Social Medicine, Institute of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Addiction. 2008 May;103(5):824-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2008.02161.x.
This study seeks to examine whether contextual factors influence adolescents' daily smoking. A focus was placed on three modifiable policies operating at a national level, non-smoking policy at educational facilities, price and minimum age for buying tobacco.
This study is based on a merged data set consisting of the 2001/02 Health Behavior in School-aged Children (HBSC) study and national-level data collected from the 2003 WHO European Tobacco Control Database and the World Development Indicators Database. HBSC is an international study including adolescents from 32 countries in Europe, Israel and North America. Data were analysed with multi-level hierarchical regression models.
The study found large differences in the prevalence of daily smoking among adolescents, and also large differences between boys and girls within some countries. The study found that smoking bans in schools were associated with lower odds ratios of daily smoking, which was the one positive association in the study. The study found no association between cigarette prices and adolescent daily smoking prevalence, and also the somewhat unexpected finding that having an age limit for allowing adolescents to purchase tobacco was associated with an increased risk of daily smoking.
There was an association between mandatory national bans on smoking and lower smoking prevalence. This should be confirmed by studies that examine whether mandatory bans are more rigorously implemented than voluntary bans. If this association is causal, introducing mandatory bans may reduce adolescent smoking prevalence. The findings that price was unrelated to smoking prevalence undermine findings elsewhere that adolescent smokers are more price-sensitive than adult smokers, but longitudinal studies are needed.
本研究旨在探讨环境因素是否会影响青少年的日常吸烟行为。研究重点关注了三项在国家层面实施的可改变政策,即教育机构的禁烟政策、烟草价格以及购买烟草的最低年龄。
本研究基于一个合并数据集,该数据集由2001/02年学龄儿童健康行为(HBSC)研究以及从2003年世界卫生组织欧洲烟草控制数据库和世界发展指标数据库收集的国家层面数据组成。HBSC是一项国际研究,涵盖了来自欧洲、以色列和北美的32个国家的青少年。数据采用多层次分层回归模型进行分析。
研究发现青少年日常吸烟率存在很大差异,并且在一些国家内男孩和女孩之间也存在很大差异。研究发现学校的禁烟令与较低的日常吸烟比值比相关,这是该研究中的一个积极关联。研究发现香烟价格与青少年日常吸烟率之间没有关联,同时还发现了一个有些出人意料的结果,即对青少年购买烟草设置年龄限制与日常吸烟风险增加相关。
国家强制禁烟与较低的吸烟率之间存在关联。这一点应由研究来证实,即考察强制禁令是否比自愿禁令得到更严格的执行。如果这种关联是因果关系,那么引入强制禁令可能会降低青少年吸烟率。价格与吸烟率无关这一发现削弱了其他地方关于青少年吸烟者比成年吸烟者对价格更敏感的研究结果,但仍需要进行纵向研究。