Cremers Henricus-Paul, Mercken Liesbeth, de Vries Hein, Oenema Anke
Department of Health Promotion, School for Public Health and Primary Care (CAPHRI), Maastricht University, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Jul 13;15:648. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1917-9.
This study identifies differences in socio-cognitive factors as they relate to the intention to smoke among boys and girls living in high socioeconomic status (HSES) and low socioeconomic status (LSES) neighborhoods.
A total of 1,643 children (aged 10-12 years) completed a web-based questionnaire assessing their intention, attitude, social influences, and self-efficacy toward smoking at baseline and at one year follow-up. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine the relations between intention and predictor variables (i.e. attitude, social influence, and self-efficacy). Three-way interaction terms were added to the first analysis to examine potential interactions of gender, socioeconomic status and predictor variables. A 3-way interaction effect was present, and therefore subgroup analyses for HSES and LSES boys and girls were warranted.
The results indicated that positive attitudes toward smoking were related to the intention to smoke among HSES boys, whereas HSES girls had higher intentions to smoke if they perceived fewer disadvantages of smoking (OR: 0.42; 95 % CI: 0.22-0.82). The intention to smoke among LSES boys was predicted by perceived social norms (OR: 0.49; 95 % CI: 0.25-0.93); in LSES girls, the smoking behavior of people in their environment was most strongly related to their smoking intention (OR: 5.55; 95 % CI: 2.81-10.93).
To prevent youth smoking, HSES boys and girls may benefit from interventions that address attitudes. Boys from an LSES neighborhood may profit from smoking prevention interventions that target social norms, while LSES girls may benefit from strategies aimed at resisting the influence of smokers in their environment.
The 'Fun without Smokes' study is approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the Atrium-Orbis-Zuyd Hospital (NL32093.096.11/MEC 11-T-25) and registered in the Dutch Trial Register ( NTR3116 ).
本研究确定了社会认知因素在生活于高社会经济地位(HSES)和低社会经济地位(LSES)社区的男孩和女孩吸烟意愿方面的差异。
共有1643名儿童(10至12岁)完成了一份基于网络的问卷,在基线期和一年随访期评估他们对吸烟的意愿、态度、社会影响和自我效能感。进行逻辑回归分析以检验意愿与预测变量(即态度、社会影响和自我效能感)之间的关系。在首次分析中加入三向交互项以检验性别、社会经济地位和预测变量之间的潜在交互作用。存在三向交互效应,因此有必要对HSES和LSES的男孩和女孩进行亚组分析。
结果表明,对吸烟持积极态度与HSES男孩的吸烟意愿相关,而如果HSES女孩认为吸烟的不利之处较少,则她们吸烟的意愿更高(比值比:0.42;95%置信区间:0.22 - 0.82)。感知到的社会规范可预测LSES男孩的吸烟意愿(比值比:0.49;95%置信区间:0.25 - 0.93);在LSES女孩中,她们周围人的吸烟行为与她们的吸烟意愿最密切相关(比值比:5.55;95%置信区间:2.81 - 10.93)。
为预防青少年吸烟,HSES男孩和女孩可能会从针对态度的干预措施中受益。来自LSES社区的男孩可能会从针对社会规范的吸烟预防干预措施中获益,而LSES女孩可能会从旨在抵制周围吸烟者影响的策略中受益。
“无烟乐趣”研究已获得阿特里姆 - 奥比斯 - 祖伊德医院医学伦理委员会批准(NL32093.096.11/MEC 11 - T - 25),并已在荷兰试验注册库注册(NTR3116)。