Lee Jay T, Smith Dennis W, Colwell Brian
Department of Educational Psychology, Health Program Area, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Health, Texas A&M School of Rural Public Health, College Station, TX, USA.
Tob Induc Dis. 2012 Dec 20;10(1):20. doi: 10.1186/1617-9625-10-20.
Given the high rate of adolescent smoking, cessation remains a vital public health priority. This study explored archival data using a structured phenomenological framework known as Reversal Theory (RT). In order to better understand aspects of adolescent tobacco use we compared the transactional, psychological states described by RT to the factor structure of adolescents' self-reported social environment influencing tobacco use.
In a two step analysis of questions about self-reported tobacco use cognitions, attitudes, and behaviors from youth enrolled during the 2003-2004 period in a Texas, state-wide, mandated tobacco cessation program (N=1807), four factors and 11 items were identified as significantly related to the influence of social context and adolescents' tobacco use. These first step results guided the items to be selected for further analysis. In step two the variables were subjected to a factor analysis using principal components extraction and varimax rotation. The resulting factor structure was compared and interpreted within the context of descriptions of RT transactional states.
The analysis indicated that four factors were closely aligned to descriptions of the Reversal Theory transactional states and could be reinterpreted from within the framework of RT. The first factor included feelings of self-efficacy for quitting (autic mastery). The second and third transactional factors diverged between one factor to quit, and an opposing transactional factor to continue to smoke. Both of these transactional states are variants of the autocentric state where one wants to experience feelings of gain with the help of others. The fourth factor could be interpreted as 'confidence' or 'optimism'.
This intra-individual conflict revealed by the opposition of factors two and three clarifies a paradoxical issue where an adolescent wants to quit smoking with social support in one setting yet in another social environment chooses to smoke to gain or retain peer acceptance. These data illustrate that adolescent' self-identified quit skills and social support structures are important to the quitting process. This exploratory investigation has important implications for addressing RT state reversals in youth cessation programming activities.
鉴于青少年吸烟率很高,戒烟仍然是一项至关重要的公共卫生优先事项。本研究使用一种称为逆转理论(RT)的结构化现象学框架来探索档案数据。为了更好地理解青少年烟草使用的各个方面,我们将RT描述的交易性心理状态与青少年自我报告的影响烟草使用的社会环境的因素结构进行了比较。
在对2003 - 2004年期间参加德克萨斯州全州强制性戒烟计划的青少年(N = 1807)自我报告的烟草使用认知、态度和行为问题进行的两步分析中,确定了四个因素和11个项目与社会背景和青少年烟草使用的影响显著相关。第一步的结果指导了用于进一步分析的项目选择。在第二步中,对变量进行了主成分提取和方差最大化旋转的因子分析。在RT交易状态描述的背景下对所得的因子结构进行了比较和解释。
分析表明,四个因素与逆转理论交易状态的描述密切相关,并且可以在RT框架内重新解释。第一个因素包括戒烟的自我效能感(自我掌控)。第二个和第三个交易因素在一个戒烟因素和一个相反的继续吸烟的交易因素之间存在差异。这两种交易状态都是自我中心状态的变体,即一个人希望在他人的帮助下体验收获的感觉。第四个因素可以解释为“信心”或“乐观”。
因素二和因素三的对立所揭示的这种个体内部冲突阐明了一个矛盾的问题,即青少年在一种环境中希望在社会支持下戒烟,但在另一种社会环境中却选择吸烟以获得或保持同伴的认可。这些数据表明,青少年自我认同的戒烟技能和社会支持结构对戒烟过程很重要。这项探索性调查对解决青少年戒烟计划活动中的RT状态逆转具有重要意义。