Trends in Parent and Friend Influence During Adolescence: The Case of Adolescent Cigarette Smoking

Citation

Bauman, K. E.; Carver, K.; & Gleiter, K. (2001). Trends in Parent and Friend Influence During Adolescence: The Case of Adolescent Cigarette Smoking. Addictive Behaviors. vol. 26 (3) pp. 349-361

Abstract

A common characterization of adolescence is that parent influence decreases and friend influence increases as adolescents age. From that, we hypothesized that the association between parent and adolescent smoking decreases and the association between friend and adolescent smoking increases as adolescents become older. The hypothesis is tested with data from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Adolescent smoking is measured as progressions to more frequent smoking and as continuations from prior smoking levels. There is no support for the hypothesis, a finding consistent with the earlier panel study that tested it. The age-specific findings are discussed in the context of programs designed to influence adolescent cigarette smoking and why the hypothesis that drove this study was not confirmed. Among supplementary findings reported is that adolescent smoking is more influenced by friend smoking than by parent smoking.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0306-4603(00)00110-6

Keyword(s)

Parent

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Addictive Behaviors

Author(s)

Bauman, K. E.
Carver, K.
Gleiter, K.

Year Published

2001

Volume Number

26

Issue Number

3

Pages

349-361

DOI

10.1016/S0306-4603(00)00110-6

Reference ID

60