РефератыИностранный языкUnUntitled Essay Research Paper AbstractCigarette smoking is

Untitled Essay Research Paper AbstractCigarette smoking is

Untitled Essay, Research Paper


Abstract


Cigarette smoking is of interest to the National Institute on Drug Abuse


both because of


the public health problems associated with this form of substance abuse and


because this


behavior represents a prototypic dependence process. In the past few years


the


government has made every effort to reach the masses, in an attempt to curb


the


exploitation of tobbacco use, and its acceptance among Americas Youngsters.


However,


cigarette smoking among adolescents is on the rise.


The premise that the behavior of adolescents is influenced by the behavior


of their


parents is central to many considerations of health and social behavior (Ausubel,


Montemayor, & Svajiian, 1977; Bandura & Walters, 1963). Many young


people between


10-18 years of age experiment with smoking, smoking is a personal choice,


and usually


exploratory in nature. Typically, it takes place in rather young people and


is largely


dependent on: first, the availability of opportunity to engage in the behavior,


second,


having a fairly high degree of curiosity about the effects of the behavior;


third, in finding


it a way of expressing either conformity to the behavior or others (such


as parents, older


siblings or peers), forth, as in “Miller and Dollar’s” explanation of


Observational


Learning, The Copying behavior effect.


This research is to examine the effects of parental smoking (behavior), has,


on the


decision of teens to smoke cigarettes. Due to prior studies using global


measures that


may or may not include South Eastern North Carolina. The Fayetteville/Fort


Bragg area


was chosen for this study to pinpoint the effects in this particular locale.


Fort Bragg and


Pope Air Force Base have a very diverse socieo-economic and culturally diverse


population, which will have a positive effect on randomness of sample selection.


With


this association in mind, this researcher is interested in knowing if there


is a relationship


of Parental influence on Teen Smoking within this Military Community.


Introduction


The prevalence of cigarette smoking among young teenagers


is a growing


problem in the United States, many young people between the ages of 10-18


are


experimenting with tobacco. During the 1040’s and 50’s smoking was popular


and


socially acceptable. Movie stars, sports heroes, and celebrities appeared


in cigarette


advertisements that promoted and heavily influenced teens. Influence also


came from


Television and other media sources. The desires to be accepted and to feel


grown up are


among the most common reasons to start smoking. Yet, even though teenagers


sometimes smoke to gain independence, and to be part of the crowd parental


influence


plays the strongest role as to whether or their children will smoke, Journal


of American


Medical Association (JAMA), 1991. Children are exposed to and influenced


by the


parents, siblings, and the media long before peer pressure will become a


factor. Mothers


should not smoke during pregnancy, nicotine, which crosses the placental


barrier, may


affect the female fetus during an important period of development so as to


predispose the


brain to the addictive influence of nicotine. Prenatal exposure to smoking


has previously


been linked with impairments in memory, learning, cognition, and perception


in the


growing child. (National Institute of Drug Abuse, 1995) Subsequent follow-up


after 12


years suggest that regardless of the amount or duration of current or past


maternal


smoking, the strongest correlation between maternal smoking and a daughter’s


smoking


occurred when the mother smoked during pregnancy. NIDA also reported that


of 192


mothers and their first born adolescents with a mean age of 12 1/2, the analysis


revealed


that 26.6% of the girls whose mother smoked while pregnant had smoked in


the past


year.


The 1991 smoking prevalence estimate of 25.7% is virtually no different from


the


previous year’s estimate of 25.5%. If current trends persist, we will not


meet one of the


nation’s health objectives, particularly a smoking prevalence of no more


than 15% by the


year 2000. When comparing the use of alcohol, cigarettes, and other drugs,


only


cigarette use did not decline substantially among high school senior among


1981 to 1991.


In contrast studies performed by “household survey” by the NIDA and the CDC,


(Centers


for Disease Control) in 1991 and 92 respectively, suggested that the strongest


influence


on teenage smoking is parents. Research also revealed that approximately


three fourths


of adult regular smokers smoke their first cigarette before the age of 18.


This data was


acquired while trying to determine the brand preferences of young smokers


to determine


what encouraged them to smoke and to suggest smoking prevention or smoking


cessation


strategies, the studies found that in over 80% of the households surveyed,


one or both


parents smoked. Many teenagers begin smoking to feel grow-up. However, if


they are


still smoking when they reach 30, the reason is no longer to feel like an


adult; at this


point, they are smoking f

rom habit. Goodwin, D. W., Guze, S. B. (1984).


Young children who see older children or family members smoking cigarettes


are going


to equate smoking with being grown up. Patterns of both drinking and smoking,


which


are closely associated, are strongly influenced by the lifestyles of family


members peers


and by the environments in which they live. Minimal, moderate, and heavy


levels of


drinking, smoking, and drug use, among family members are strongly associated


with


very similar patterns of use among adolescents. Bentler, P., Newcoomb, M.,


(1989).


Parents who smoke and wish they didn’t should concentrate on their own efforts


to stop


and hope that their offspring get the message.


Another good view of smoking among young people can be obtained from the


federal


government’s Annual National Survey of drug use among seniors, and now other


high


school students. Reports of cigarette use in the past years have declined


since the peak of


almost 40% in 1975. The 30% mark was crossed in 1981, with a very gradual


further


decline to 25.7% in 1991 and increased to 27.8% in 1992, Johnston, O’Malley,


(1993).


According to cognitive social learning theory, boys and girls learn appropriate


behavior


through reinforcement and modeling. To date, numerous studies have examined


parental


influence on teenage smoking and has yielded equivocal results Due to the


implications


of cigarette smoking behavior for the public health and the view that smoking


is the


prototypical dependence process. Research taken from the TAPS (Teen-age Attitudes


and practices Survey) 1992, reported that if parents smoke, their children


are more likely


to smoke. In regions of the United States that was surveyed, it was documented


that


9135 of 11609 (79%), of the respondents to the survey of teenage smokers


lived in


households where one or both parents/guardians smoked tobacco. This information


was


taken from household samples of adolescents ages 12-18 done by a computer


Assisted


Telephone interviewing system (CAT). The goal of this research is to focus


upon the


systematic compilation of data collected in this survey/correlation study


and serve as a


basis for designing feasible and effective treatment strategies as well as


enhance our


understanding of dependence associated with cigarette smoking and substance


abuse.


Method


Design


Questions will be of nominal and rating format (attached), Non respondents


will not be


included in the study. The questions (10), will be on a 8 1/2x 11 sheet of


paper. The


questions will be divided into three categories, (health history of parents


present smoking


habits, and general. The Dependent variable used in this study is adolescent


smoking


behavior.


Subjects


A total of 500 teens male and female 14-18 years old, randomly selected from


various


areas around the Fort Bragg, Pope Air Force Base, and Fayetteville area.


$2 will be given


in exchange for participation.


Materials


Questionnaires will be given to individuals upon their approval to participate


in the


study, a number two pencil will be used to write with.


Procedure


Participants will be chosen at random from either the Post Exchange and the


movie


theaters of the Fort Bragg area. Participation will be voluntary after an


explanation of the


study. Since this research involve minors, each participants will sign a


release form.


Each respondent will be allotted 15 minutes to complete the questionnaire,


and not to


discuss the contents with other participants. However participants, will


be told that they


can discuss this issue with parents/guardians. A phone number of the researcher


will be


given to each respondent in case of any afterthoughts. Non respondents will


not be


included in the study. The questions (10), will be on a 8 1/2x 11 sheet of


paper and


consist of both, true/false, and nominal data, yes/no. The questions will


be divided into


three categories, (health history of parents present smoking habits, and


general. chi-


square and t-distribution statistics will be used to identify significant


differences between


sub samples.References


Bauman, K. E., Foshee, V. A., Linzer, M. A., Koch, G.


G. (1990). Effect of


parental smoking classification on the association between parental and


adolescent


smoking. Addictive-behaviors, 15,(5), 413-422.


Horevitz, M. J., (1985). Disasters and psychological responses


to stress.


Psychiatric Annals, 15, 161-167.


Hu, F. B. Flak, B. R., Hedeker, D. (1995). The inlfence


of friends and


parental smoking on adolescent smoking behavior. Journal of Applied Social


Psychology, v4 (3), 215-225.


Jessor, R. (1993). Successful adolescent development among


high-risk settings,


American Psychologist, 48, 117-126.


Johnston, L., O’Malley, P., Bachman, J. (1988). Drug use


among American high


school students, College students and other young adults. National trends


through 1991.


National Institute on Drug Abuse.


Research Monograph Series, (1979). Cigarette Smoking as


a dependence


Process. National Institute on Drug Abuse. 23


318

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