Thrasher James F, Jackson Christine, Arillo-Santillán Edna, Sargent James D
Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2008 Aug;35(2):95-102. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2008.03.036.
Exposure to smoking imagery in films is consistently associated with smoking behavior and its psychological antecedents among adolescents in high-income countries, but its association with adolescent smoking in middle-income countries is unknown.
In 2006, a cross-sectional sample of 3876 Mexican adolescents in secondary school was surveyed on smoking behavior, smoking risk factors, and exposure to 42 popular films that contained smoking. Participants were classified into quartiles of exposure to smoking imagery across all films they reported having seen. Models were estimated to determine associations among quartiles of film-smoking exposure, smoking behavior, and the psychological antecedents of smoking, adjusting for age, gender, sensation seeking, self-esteem, parental smoking, sibling smoking, best-friend smoking, having a bedroom TV, and private versus public school attendance. Analyses were conducted in 2007.
Adolescents were exposed to an average of 51.7 (SE=1.3) minutes of smoking in the films they viewed. Crude and adjusted ORs indicated positive associations between quartiles of film-smoking exposure and both current smoking (AOR4v1=3.13; p<0.0001) and having ever smoked (AOR4v1=2.42; p<0.0001). Data from never-smokers (n=2098) were analyzed to determine associations between film-smoking exposure and psychological antecedents of smoking uptake. Crude and adjusted coefficients indicated significant, positive associations between exposure and susceptibility to smoking (AOR4v1=1.66; p<0.05); favorable attitudes toward smoking (Adjusted B4v1=0.44; p<0.0001); and perceived peer prevalence of smoking (Adjusted B4v1=0.26; p<0.0001).
Exposure to smoking in films appears associated with smoking among Mexican adolescents. Policies could aim to decrease youth exposure to smoking in nationally and internationally distributed films.
在高收入国家,青少年接触电影中的吸烟画面与吸烟行为及其心理诱因始终存在关联,但在中等收入国家,这种关联尚不清楚。
2006年,对3876名墨西哥中学生进行了横断面抽样调查,内容包括吸烟行为、吸烟风险因素以及对42部包含吸烟场景的流行电影的接触情况。参与者根据其报告看过的所有电影中接触吸烟画面的程度被分为四分位数。通过建立模型来确定电影吸烟画面接触程度的四分位数、吸烟行为以及吸烟的心理诱因之间的关联,并对年龄、性别、寻求刺激、自尊、父母吸烟、兄弟姐妹吸烟、最好的朋友吸烟、卧室是否有电视以及是私立学校还是公立学校就读等因素进行了调整。分析于2007年进行。
青少年观看的电影中平均有51.7(标准误=1.3)分钟的吸烟场景。粗比值比和调整后的比值比表明,电影吸烟画面接触程度的四分位数与当前吸烟(调整后的比值比4比1=3.13;p<0.0001)和曾经吸烟(调整后的比值比4比1=2.42;p<0.0001)均呈正相关。对从不吸烟者(n=2098)的数据进行分析,以确定电影吸烟画面接触与开始吸烟的心理诱因之间的关联。粗系数和调整后的系数表明,接触与吸烟易感性(调整后的比值比4比1=1.66;p<0.05)、对吸烟的积极态度(调整后的B值4比1=0.44;p<0.0001)以及感知到的同伴吸烟率(调整后的B值4比1=0.26;p<0.0001)之间存在显著的正相关。
电影中的吸烟画面似乎与墨西哥青少年吸烟有关。政策可以旨在减少青少年在国内和国际发行的电影中接触吸烟画面的机会。