期刊论文详细信息
BMC Public Health
Starting to smoke: a qualitative study of the experiences of Australian indigenous youth
David P Thomas2  Cyan Earnshaw1  Darren W Westphal1  Vanessa Johnston1 
[1] Menzies School of Health Research, Institute of Advanced Studies, Charles Darwin University, PO Box 41096, Casuarina, Northern Territory 0811 Australia;Lowitja Institute, Charles Darwin University, PO Box U364, Casuarina, Northern Territory 0815 Australia
关键词: Australia;    Tobacco;    Smoking;    Youth;    Aboriginal;   
Others  :  1162865
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-2458-12-963
 received in 2012-06-20, accepted in 2012-11-06,  发布年份 2012
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

Adult smoking has its roots in adolescence. If individuals do not initiate smoking during this period it is unlikely they ever will. In high income countries, smoking rates among Indigenous youth are disproportionately high. However, despite a wealth of literature in other populations, there is less evidence on the determinants of smoking initiation among Indigenous youth. The aim of this study was to explore the determinants of smoking among Australian Indigenous young people with a particular emphasis on the social and cultural processes that underlie tobacco use patterns among this group.

Methods

This project was undertaken in northern Australia. We undertook group interviews with 65 participants and individual in-depth interviews with 11 youth aged 13–20 years led by trained youth ‘peer researchers.’ We also used visual methods (photo-elicitation) with individual interviewees to investigate the social context in which young people do or do not smoke. Included in the sample were a smaller number of non-Indigenous youth to explore any significant differences between ethnic groups in determinants of early smoking experiences. The theory of triadic influence, an ecological model of health behaviour, was used as an organising theory for analysis.

Results

Family and peer influences play a central role in smoking uptake among Indigenous youth. Social influences to smoke are similar between Indigenous and non-Indigenous youth but are more pervasive (especially in the family domain) among Indigenous youth. While Indigenous youth report high levels of exposure to smoking role models and smoking socialisation practices among their family and social networks, this study provides some indication of a progressive denormalisation of smoking among some Indigenous youth.

Conclusions

Future initiatives aimed at preventing smoking uptake in this population need to focus on changing social normative beliefs around smoking, both at a population level and within young peoples’ immediate social environment. Such interventions could be effectively delivered in both the school and family environments. Specifically, health practitioners in contact with Indigenous families should be promoting smoke free homes and other anti-smoking socialisation behaviours.

【 授权许可】

   
2012 Johnston et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150413082353843.pdf 755KB PDF download
Figure 4. 58KB Image download
Figure 3. 30KB Image download
Figure 2. 45KB Image download
Figure 1. 49KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Figure 1.

Figure 2.

Figure 3.

Figure 4.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]USDHHS: Preventing tobacco Use among youth and young adults: a report of the Surgeon General. US Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, Atlanta; 2012.
  • [2]ABS: National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social survey 2008. Canberra: Australian Bureau of Statistics (No. 4714.0); 2009.
  • [3]ABS: Tobacco smoking - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: a snapshot, 2004–05. Canberra: Australian Bureau of Statistics (No. 4722.0.55.004); 2007.
  • [4]Mayhew KP, Flay BR, Mott JA: Stages in the development of adolescent smoking. Drug Alcohol Depend 2000, 59:S61-S81.
  • [5]Breslau N, Peterson EL: Smoking cessation in young adults: age at initiation of cigarette smoking and other suspected influences. Am J Public Health 1996, 86:214-220.
  • [6]Vos T, Barker B, Stanley L, Lopez AD: The burden of disease and injury in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples 2003. Brisbane: School of Population Health, The University of Queensland; 2007.
  • [7]Tyas SL, Pederson LL: Psychosocial factors related to adolescent smoking: a critical review of the literature. Tob Control 1998, 7:409-420.
  • [8]Turner L, Mermelstein R, Flay B: Individual and contextual influences on adolescent smoking. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2004, 1021:175-197.
  • [9]O’Loughlin J, Karp I, Koulis T, Paradis G, DiFranza J: Determinants of first puff and daily cigarette smoking in adolescents. Am J Epidemiol 2009, 170:585-597.
  • [10]Park S, Weaver TE, Romer D: Predictors of the transition from experimental to daily smoking in late adolescence and young adulthood. J Drug Educ 2010, 40:125-141.
  • [11]Scherrer JF, Xian H, Pan H, Pergadia ML, Madden PAF, Grant JD, Sartor CE, Haber JR, Jacob T, Bucholz KK: Parent, sibling and peer influences on smoking initiation, regular smoking and nicotine dependence. Results from a genetically informative design. Addict Behav 2012, 37:240-247.
  • [12]Wilkinson A, Shete S, Prokhorov A: The moderating role of parental smoking on their children’s attitudes toward smoking among a predominantly minority sample: a cross-sectional analysis. Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policyhttp://www.substanceabusepolicy.com/content/3/1/18 webcite
  • [13]Tjora T, Hetland J, Aaro LE, Overland S: Distal and proximal family predictors of adolescents’ smoking initiation and development. a longitudinal latent curve model analysis. BMC Publ Health 2011. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/11/911 webcite
  • [14]Wakefield M, Forster J: Growing evidence for new benefit of clean indoor air laws: reduced adolescent smoking. Tob Control 2005, 14:292-293.
  • [15]Emory K, Saquib N, Gilpin EA, Pierce JP: The association between home smoking restrictions and youth smoking behaviour: a review. Tob Control 2010, 19:495-506.
  • [16]Brinn MP, Carson KV, Esterman AJ, Chang AB, Smith BJ: Mass media interventions for preventing smoking in young people. Cochrane Database Syst Rev (4) Art. No.: CD001006
  • [17]Green D: Exploring the initiation of smoking among Indigenous youth. Master of Public Health thesis. The University of Melbourne: School of Population Health; 2009.
  • [18]Leavy J, Wood L, Phillips F, Rosenberg M: Try and try again: qualitative insights into adolescent smoking experimentation and notions of addiction. Health Promot J Aust 2010, 21:208-214.
  • [19]Passey ME, Gale JT, Sanson-Fisher RW: “Its almost expected”: rural Australian Aboriginal women’s reflections on smoking initiation and maintenance: a qualitative study. BMC Womens Health 2011. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6874/11/55 webcite
  • [20]Mermelstein R: Explanations of ethnic and gender differences in youth smoking: a multi-site, qualitative investigation. Nicotine Tob Res 1999, 1:S91-S98.
  • [21]Kegler MC, McCormick L, Crawford M, Allen P, Spigner C, Ureda J: An exploration of family influences on smoking among ethnically diverse adolescents. Health Educ Behav 2002, 29:473-490.
  • [22]Kegler MC, Kingsley B, Malcoe LH, Cleaver V, Reid J, Solomon G: The functional value of smoking and nonsmoking from the perspective of American Indian youth. Fam Community Health 1999, 22:31-42.
  • [23]Pyett P: Working together to reduce health inequalities: reflections on a collaborative participatory approach to health research. Aust N Z J Public Health 2002, 26:332-336.
  • [24]Krueger R, Casey MA: Focus groups: a practical guide for applied research. 3rd edition. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; 2000.
  • [25]Rice PL, Ezzy D: Qualitative research methods. A health focus. Melbourne: Oxford University Press; 2004.
  • [26]Wang CC, Pies CA: Family, maternal and child health through photovoice. Matern Child Health J 2004, 8:95-102.
  • [27]Wang CC, Redwood-Jones YA: Photovoice ethics: perspectives from flint photovoice. Health Educ Behav 2001, 28:560-572.
  • [28]Haines RJ, Oliffe JL, Bottorff JL, Poland BD: ‘The missing picture’: tobacco use through the eyes of smokers. Tob Control 2010, 19:206-212.
  • [29]Drew SE, Duncan RE, Sawyer SM: Visual storytelling: a beneficial but challenging method for health research with young people. Qual Health Res 2010, 20:1677-1688.
  • [30]Harper D: Talking about pictures: a case for photo eilicitation. Vis Stud 2002, 17:13-26.
  • [31]Flay BR, Petraitus J: The theory of triadic influence: a new theory of health behavior with implications for preventive interventions. In Advances in medical sociology: a reconsideration of models of health behavior change. 4th edition. Edited by Albrect GS. Grennwich, Conn: JAI Press; 1994:19-44.
  • [32]Flay BR, Snyder FJ, Petraitis J: The theory of triadic influence. In Emerging theories in health promotion and research. Edited by Diclemente RJ, Crosby RA, Kegler MC. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass; 2009:451-510.
  • [33]Johnston V, Thomas DP: Smoking behaviours in a remote Australian Indigenous community: the influence of family and other factors. Soc Sci Med 2008, 67:1708-1716.
  • [34]Kegler M, Cleaver V, Kingsley B: The social context of experimenting with cigarettes: American Indian “start stories”. Am J Health Promot 2000, 15:89-92.
  • [35]Robinson J, Amos A: A qualitative study of young people’s sources of cigarettes and attempts to circumvent underage sales laws. Addiction 2010, 105:1835-1843.
  • [36]Stead LF, Lancaster T: Interventions for preventing tobacco sales to minors. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2005., (1) Art. No.: CD001497
  • [37]Evans WD, Powers A, Hersey J, Renaud J: The influence of social environment and social image on adolescent smoking. Health Psychol 2006, 25:26-33.
  • [38]Spein AR, Sexton H, Kvernmo S: Predictors of smoking behaviour among indigenous Sami adolescents and non-indigenous peers in north norway. Scand J Public Health 2004, 32:118-129.
  • [39]Ennett ST, Bauman KE: The contribution of influence and selection to adolescent peer group homogeneity: the case of adolescent cigarette smoking. J Pers Soc Psychol 1994, 67:653-663.
  • [40]Haines RJ, Poland BD, Johnson JL: Becoming a ‘real’ smoker: cultural capital in young women’s accounts of smoking and other substance use. Sociol Health Illn 2009, 31:66-80.
  • [41]Stanton WR, Lowe JB, Gillespie AM: Adolescents’ experiences of smoking cessation. Drug Alcohol Depend 1996, 43:63-70.
  • [42]Simons-Morton B, Farhat T: Recent findings on peer group influences on adolescent smoking. J Prim Prev 2010, 31:191-208.
  • [43]Jackson C, Henriksen L, Foshee VA: The authoritative parenting index: predicting health risk behaviors among children and adolescents. Health Educ Behav 1998, 25:319-337.
  • [44]Radziszewska B, Richardson JL, Dent CW, Flay BR: Parenting style and adolescent depressive symptoms, smoking, and academic achievement: ethnic, gender, and SES differences. J Behav Med 1996, 19:289-305.
  • [45]Kegler MC, Cleaver VL, Yazzie-Valencia M: An exploration of the influence of family on cigarette smoking among American Indian adolescents. Health Educ Res 2000, 15:547-557.
  • [46]Kegler MC, Malcoe LH: Anti-smoking socialization beliefs among rural Native American and White parents of young children. Health Educ Res 2005, 20:175-184.
  • [47]Leonardi-Bee J, Jere ML, Britton J: Exposure to parental and sibling smoking and the risk of smoking uptake in childhood and adolescence: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Thorax 2011, 66:847-855.
  • [48]Quintero G, Davis S: Why do teens smoke? - American Indian and Hispanic adolescents’ perspectives on functional values and addiction. Med Anthropol Q 2002, 16:439-457.
  • [49]Henriksen L, Jackson C: Anti-smoking socialization: relationship to parent and child smoking status. Health Commun 1998, 10:87.
  • [50]Jackson C, Henriksen L: Do as I say: parent smoking, antismoking socialization, and smoking onset among children. Addict Behav 1997, 22:107-114.
  • [51]Mahabee-Gittens EM, Xiao Y, Gordon JS, Khoury JC: The role of family influences on adolescent smoking in different racial/ethnic groups. Nicotine Tob Res 2012, 14:264-273.
  • [52]Waa A, Edwards R, Newcombe R, Zhang J, Weerasekera D, Peace J, McDuff I: Parental behaviours, but not parental smoking, influence current smoking and smoking susceptibility among 14 and 15 year-old children. Aust NZ J of Public Health 2011, 35:530-536.
  • [53]Jackson C, Henriksen L, Dickinson D, Levine DW: The early use of alcohol and tobacco: its relation to children’s competence and parents’ behavior. Am J Public Health 1997, 87:359-364.
  • [54]Vitaro F, Wanner B, Brendgen M, Gosselin C, Gendreau PL: Differential contribution of parents and friends to smoking trajectories during adolescence. Addict Behav 2004, 29:831-835.
  • [55]Sargent JD, DiFranza JR: Tobacco control for clinicians who treat adolescents. CA Cancer J Clin 2003, 53:102-123.
  • [56]West P, Sweeting H, Ecob R: Family and friends’ influences on the uptake of regular smoking from mid-adolescence to early adulthood. Addiction 1999, 94:1397-1411.
  • [57]Bricker JB, Peterson AV, Leroux BG, Andersen MR, Bharat Rajan K, Sarason IG: Prospective prediction of children’s smoking transitions: role of parents’ and older siblings’ smoking. Addiction 2006, 101:128-136.
  • [58]Bricker JB, Peterson AV Jr, Sarason IG, Andersen MR, Rajan KB: Changes in the influence of parents’ and close friends’ smoking on adolescent smoking transitions. Addict Behav 2007, 32:740-757.
  • [59]Sawyer SM, Afifi RA, Bearinger LH, Blakemore S-J, Dick B, Ezeh AC, Patton GC: Adolescence: a foundation for future health. Lancet 2012, 379:1630-1640.
  • [60]Flay BR, Hu FB, Siddiqui O, Day LE, Hedeker D, Petraitis J, Richardson J, Sussman S: Differential influence of parental smoking and friends’ smoking on adolescent initiation and escalation and smoking. J Health Soc Behav 1994, 35:248-265.
  • [61]Stjerna M-L, Lauritzen SO, Tillgren P: “Social thinking” and cultural images: teenagers’ notions of tobacco use. Soc Sci Med 2004, 59:573-583.
  • [62]Lloyd B, Lucas K, Fernbach M: Adolescent girls’ constructions of smoking identities: implications for health promotion. J Adolesc 1997, 20:43-56.
  • [63]McPherson M, Smith-Lovin L, Cook JM: Birds of a feather: homophily in social networks. Annu Rev Sociol 2001, 27:415-444.
  • [64]Poland B, Frohlich K, Haines RJ, Mykhalovskiy E, Rock M, Sparks R: The social context of smoking: the next frontier in tobacco control? Tob Control 2006, 15:59-63.
  • [65]Maxwell KA: Friends: the role of peer influence across adolescent risk behaviors. J Youth Adolesc 2002, 31:267-277.
  • [66]Amos A, Bostock Y: Young people, smoking and gender - a qualitative exploration. Health Educ Res 2007, 22:770-781.
  • [67]Griesler PC, Kandel DB, Davies M: Ethnic differences in predictors of initiation and persistence of adolescent cigarette smoking in the national longitudinal survey of youth. Nicotine Tob Res 2002, 4:79-93.
  • [68]Pierce JP, White VM, Emery SL: What public health strategies are needed to reduce smoking initiation? Tob Control 2012, 21:258-264.
  • [69]Scollo MM, Winstanley MH (Eds): Tobacco in Australia: facts and issues. 3rd edition. Melbourne: Cancer Council Victoria; 2008. http://www.tobaccoinaustralia.org.au webcite
  • [70]Audrey S, Cordall K, Moore L, Cohen D, Campbell R: The development and implementation of a peer-led intervention to prevent smoking among secondary school students using their established social networks. Health Educ J 2004, 63:266-284.
  • [71]Campbell R, Starkey F, Holliday J, Audrey S, Bloor M, Parry-Langdon N, Hughes R, Moore L: An informal school-based peer-led intervention for smoking prevention in adolescence (ASSIST): a cluster randomised trial. Lancet 2008, 371:1595-1602.
  • [72]Thomas RE, Baker P, Lorenzetti D: Family-based programmes for preventing smoking by children and adolescents. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2007., (1) Art. No.: CD004493
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:5次 浏览次数:11次