Pampel Fred C
University of Colorado, Boulder 80309, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2008 Dec;49(4):484-98.
Cigarette smoking by whites and African Americans shows puzzling age differences: An African American advantage during the teen years no longer appears in mid-adulthood. This study uses two data sets to examine whether the life-course change is real--and not due to misleading comparisons across different cohorts--and then whether the racial convergence is consistent with resource or stress arguments emphasizing, respectively, cessation among whites or late initiation among African Americans. First, multilevel growth models using data from the National Youth Survey-a prospective, longitudinal study of a randomly selected national sample of teens followed from ages 12 to 18 in 1977 to ages 26 to 34 in 1992--reveal that the racial convergence in smoking prevalence over the life course among this cohort is due primarily to greater white cessation. Second, consecutive cross-sectional samples of the National Health Survey replicate the broad patterns found in the NYS and show that convergence in smoking trajectories by race has strengthened over time. Together the results most favor a resource explanation of the different life-course patterns of smoking among whites and African Americans.
非裔美国人在青少年时期的吸烟优势在成年中期不再显现。本研究使用两个数据集来检验这种生命历程中的变化是否真实——而非由于不同队列之间的误导性比较——然后检验种族趋同是否与分别强调白人戒烟或非裔美国人晚开始吸烟的资源或压力论点一致。首先,使用来自全国青年调查的数据建立的多层次增长模型——这是一项对1977年随机抽取的全国青少年样本进行的前瞻性纵向研究,从12岁跟踪到18岁,并在1992年跟踪到26岁至34岁——表明该队列中吸烟流行率在生命历程中的种族趋同主要是由于白人戒烟率更高。其次,全国健康调查的连续横断面样本复制了在全国青年调查中发现的广泛模式,并表明按种族划分的吸烟轨迹趋同随着时间的推移而加强。综合来看,这些结果最支持用资源来解释白人和非裔美国人在吸烟生命历程模式上的差异。