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Impulsive Behavior More Common Among Children Of Smokers

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health;  Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 07 Nov 2008 - 4:00 PST

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Adolescents may have more in common with their smoking parents than previously thought, a new study conducted by researchers at Nationwide Children's Hospital finds. These adolescents may also share a tendency to act impulsively, a trait that could be linked to a decision to become a smoker. The study, slated for print publication in the January issue of Drug and Alcohol Dependence and currently available online at ScienceDirect, may help identify behavioral risk factors for adolescent smoking - risk factors that could increase some teens' chance of addiction even before they pick up their first cigarette

Brady Reynolds, PhD, the study's lead author and principal investigator with the Center for Biobehavioral Health of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, has focused much of his work on the connection between smoking and impulsivity, or more specifically, delay discounting. Delay discounting describes a person's preference for a smaller, more immediate reward over a larger reward that is delayed for a period of time. It also has been shown to play an important role in the behavior of cigarette smoking.

Reynolds' recent manuscript found that cigarette smoking mothers chose the immediate reward (discounted) significantly more than nonsmoking mothers. Similarly, children of mothers who smoked discounted significantly more than children of nonsmokers. These results parallel findings between adult addicted and non-addicted populations.

"Based on our findings, campaigns to prevent adolescents from smoking are likely to be more effective if they emphasize short-term consequences to smoking, as opposed to long-term consequences," said Reynolds, also a member of the faculty at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. "This strategy would seem to be especially important for those adolescents most at risk of nicotine addiction."

The research did not address whether or not discounting differences are due to genetic factors, home environmental factors related to cigarette smoking, or perhaps smoking during pregnancy. Regardless, it does identify a measurable tendency that could increase the chance of addiction for adolescents who are already at increased risk for smoking, before any substantial use of nicotine.

The study examined 60 participants in the central Ohio community and included half of the mothers who reported currently smoking, and the other half reported never smoking. All of the children (12-13-years-old) were nonsmokers.

"Our study is significant in that it indicates most adolescent smokers, or children at risk of smoking, respond to more immediate consequences when making choices," said Reynolds. "Therefore, prevention programs that stress the long-term negative effects of smoking are going to be less effective for those adolescents most at risk of smoking. Also, cessation programs focused on long-term outcomes will likely be less effective for adolescent smokers attempting to quit."

Brin, 18, uses a machine that studies impulsivity and could lead to answers about why adolescents start smoking cigarettes. Researchers at Nationwide Children's Hospital are looking into those answers.

Nationwide Children's Hospital




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