Trajectories of smoking from adolescence to early adulthood and their psychosocial risk factors

Citation

Costello, D. M.; Dierker, L. C.; Jones, B. L.; & Rose, J. S. (2008). Trajectories of smoking from adolescence to early adulthood and their psychosocial risk factors. Health Psychol. vol. 27 (6) pp. 811-818 , PMCID: PMC2703591

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore patterns of persistence and change in smoking behavior as well as risk factors associated with the developmental course of smoking from age 13 to 25. DESIGN: Data from the public use sample of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (N = 5,789) were analyzed using semiparametric group-based modeling. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Smoking quantity-frequency in the past 30 days. RESULTS: Six distinct smoking trajectories were identified: nonsmokers, experimenters, stable light smokers, quitters, late escalators, and stable high smokers. Baseline risk factors that were associated with greater likelihood of membership in all of the smoking trajectory groups compared with nonsmokers included alcohol use, deviance, peer smoking, and (with the exception of the late escalators) drug use. Deviance, peer smoking, and alcohol and drug use also distinguished the likelihood of membership among several of the 5 smoking trajectory groups. CONCLUSION: The results add to basic etiologic research on developmental pathways of smoking in adolescence and young adulthood by providing evidence of heterogeneity in smoking behavior and prospectively linking different patterns of risk factors with the probability of trajectory group membership.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0278-6133.27.6.811

Keyword(s)

Adolescent

Notes

Costello, Darce M

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Health Psychol

Author(s)

Costello, D. M.
Dierker, L. C.
Jones, B. L.
Rose, J. S.

Year Published

2008

Volume Number

27

Issue Number

6

Pages

811-818

Edition

2008/11/26

DOI

10.1037/0278-6133.27.6.811

PMCID

PMC2703591

NIHMSID

Nihms101206

Reference ID

1772