Parenting style and smoking-specific parenting practices as predictors of adolescent smoking onset |
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Authors: | Chassin Laurie Presson Clark C Rose Jennifer Sherman Steven J Davis Matthew J Gonzalez Jeremy L |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, PO Box 871104, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1104, USA. Laurie.chassin@asu.edu |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVE: To test whether parenting style and smoking-specific parenting practices prospectively predicted adolescent smoking. METHODS: Three hundred eighty-two adolescents (age 10-17 years, initial nonsmokers, 98% non-Hispanic whites) and their parents were interviewed, with smoking also assessed 1-2 years later. RESULTS: Adolescents from disengaged families (low acceptance and low behavioral control) were most likely to initiate smoking. Adolescents' reports of parents' smoking-related discussion was related to lowered smoking risk for adolescents with nonsmoking parents, but unrelated to smoking onset for adolescents with smoking parents. Smoking-specific parenting practices did not account for the effects of general parenting styles. CONCLUSIONS: Both parenting style and smoking-specific parenting practices have unique effects on adolescent smoking, although effects were largely confined to adolescents' reports; and for smoking-specific parenting practices, effects were confined to families with nonsmoking parents. Interventions that focus only on smoking-specific parenting practices may be insufficient to deter adolescent smoking. |
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