
Volume 29, Issue 4: August, 2002
Abstract
An Exploration of Family Influences on Smoking Among Ethnically
Diverse Adolescents
An Exploration of Family Influences on Smoking Among Ethnically
Diverse Adolescents
In an attempt to better understand mechanisms through which
families might influence adolescent smoking, focus group data
collected as part of a larger study of ethnic and gender differences
in teen smoking were analyzed for family-related themes. Across
six sites, 132 focus groups were conducted with African American,
American Indian, Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, and White
youth. Similarities across race/ethnicity were evident in
the content of antismoking messages and the feeling among
youth that they would get in trouble with their parents if
caught smoking. African American and Asian/Pacific Islander
youth appeared more concerned about their parents thinking
less of them if they smoked than were youth from other racial/ethnic
groups. White and American Indian youth were more likely to
discuss that their parents felt it was their own decision
as to whether or not to smoke than were the other groups.
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