Many Teen Smokers Struggle To Kick The Habit
Main Category: Smoking / Quit SmokingAlso Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 17 Jul 2008 - 3:00 PST
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Most teenagers who smoke cigarettes make repeated attempts to quit but most are unsuccessful, according to new research from the Universite de Montreal and funded by the Canadian Cancer Society.
"The study found that teen smokers make their first serious attempt to quit after only two and a half months of smoking, and by the time they have smoked for 21 months they have lost confidence in their ability to quit," says Dr. Jennifer O'Loughlin, the study's lead author and a researcher from the Universite de Montreal's department of social and preventive medicine.
Dr. O'Loughlin analyzed data from 319 Montreal teens who completed reports on their smoking habits every three months for five years. The study, published online in the American Journal of Public Health, found that teen smokers progress through stages or milestones in their attempts to stop smoking. These stages are:
- Confidently declaring that they have stopped smoking forever, one to two months after their first puff;
- Expressing a conscious desire to quit with a growing realization that quitting requires serious effort;
- Over the next two years, as cravings and withdrawal symptoms increase, gradually losing confidence in their ability to quit;
- A year later, they are smoking daily and now realize they still smoke because it is very hard to quit;
- About two years after starting to smoke cigarettes daily, teen smokers are showing full-blown tobacco dependence.
"These findings indicate that teenagers want to quit smoking," says Dr. O'Loughlin. "We really need to develop and implement effective tobacco control interventions for young people, before it's too late."
Participants were aged 12 to 13 at the beginning of the study. For these novice smokers it took about:
- Nine months after their first puff to become monthly smokers;
- 19 months after their first puff to become weekly smokers;
- 23 months after their first puff to become daily smokers.
Recent teen smoking statistics
According to the 2006 Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey:
- Among Canadian teens aged 15 to 19 some 15 percent are current smokers;
- Among Quebec teens aged 15 to 19 some 18 percent are current smokers - one of the highest rates in Canada.
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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About Jennifer O'Loughlin
Dr Jennifer O'Loughlin is a professor in the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the Université de Montréal and Canada Research Chair in the Early Determinants of Adult Chronic Disease. She is also a researcher at the Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal and a consultant at the Institut national de santé publique du Québec.
Partners in research:
"Milestones in the process of cessation among novice smokers," by Jennifer O'Loughlin published in American Journal of Public Health, was funded by the Canadian Cancer Society.
On the Web:
About the Université de Montréal
About the Canadian Cancer Society
This release is available in French.
Source: Sylvain-Jacques Desjardins
University of Montreal
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