Mq. Wang et al., SOCIAL INFLUENCES ON ADOLESCENTS SMOKING PROGRESS - A LONGITUDINAL ANALYSIS, American journal of health behavior, 21(2), 1997, pp. 111-117
The purpose of this study was to examine social factors that predicted
adolescent smoking transition from nonsmoking or experimental smoking
to more advanced stages of smoking behavior during a three-year span.
A national cohort sample of adolescents (N=7,960) who participated in
the 1989 and 1993 Teenage Attitudes and Practices Survey (TAPS I and
TAPS II, respectively) was used for this study. The information obtain
ed from this survey included measures of smoking behavior and a series
of factors related to smoking models in the respondents' social envir
onment. Results showed that the smoking behavior of best friends was t
he only consistent and significant factor in predicting adolescent smo
king progress to more advanced stages of acquisition. Overall, the abi
lity of social factors to predict adolescent smoking progress was weak
. The findings of this study did not support the concept of the social
learning theory in adolescent smoking behavior.