Popular high school students more likely to be smokers, study says
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"Popularity is a strong predictor of smoking," study author Thomas Valente, professor of preventive medicine at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine, told HealthDay. "We haven't done enough to make it cool not to smoke."
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According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 80 percent of adult smokers began smoking before the age of 18. About 19.5 percent of high school students smoked at least one cigarette and about 8.9 percent used smokeless tobacco in the previous month before they were surveyed in 2009. On any given day, about 3,800 people under the age of 18 smoke their first cigarette.
For the study, which was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health on Sept. 6, researchers at the University of Southern California (USC) and University of Texas surveyed 1,950 high schoolers in the 9th and 10th grades in seven Southern California schools. The majority of the student body was Hispanic or Latino.
The teens were asked if they smoked cigarettes, how often they smoked, how many students their age they thought smoked, how their close friends felt about smoking and who their five closest friends were at school.
The students named the most as a friend were deemed the most popular. Researchers found that the popular kids were more likely to start smoking earlier than those who were less popular. Students who became smokers were more likely to be friends with other smokers, and those who thought their friends were smoking were more likely to smoke, even if that assumption was wrong.
However, the number of kids students thought were smoking was less likely to influence their decision compared to if their close friends were smoking.
Researchers pointed out that three other studies - one that looked at kids at a Mexican high school, one that involved sixth and seventh graders across Southern California and another that surveyed high school students across the U.S. - came up with similar results.
"Adolescence is a time when students turn to others to figure out what is important. These are four different samples, now, coming from different places -- and the finding is consistent," Valente said in a press release.
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- I think that teens are trying to find outlets like anyone else for stress reduction, (nicotine has a strong calming element), the frustration of trying to fit in (like anyone else, age does not matter) and the fact is, that we are ramping up activities to the point of endless frenzy does not help. If we expect folks to stop drinking, stop caffeine, stop smoking, and doing other mind altering substances (this included prescription medications, etc), than we need to slow down, find better outlets or recognize that mind altering substances have been used since millennia, and there probably is a good reason for it, and move on.
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- One did it behind the barn and the other did it behind Independence Hall.
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- Don't listen to all of the hype about dieing from lung cancer just because you smoke. There are over 1,000 toxins in the air we all breathe every day that can cause lung cancer in a person. As far as cigarette smoking goes I have been smoking for app 45 years and I have never had any problems with lungs or any type of cancer. Many of the testing done on smoke is all lies just to support people quiting smoking and taxing the tobacco to death. Don't believe nothing you read, half of what you are told, and only some of what you see. What makes people think that the tobacco haters wouldn't lie about smoke and smoking!
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- Why can't the people and Government of the US just leave the smokers alone. We still have the freedom to choose, right. It sure don't feel like it when our own Government taxes smokers like we are some sort of criminals here and don't belong just because we smoke! It is time to make the smokers part of this free society again and stop over taxing us for what we choose to do as long as it is not illegal!
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- It is more than just taxing cigarettes. Schools and hospitals ban smoking anywhere on their property and many states and the Federal government ban smoking in the workplace. In fact, some employers will not hire or keep smokers. My community has even banned smoking in public parks. Yes, smokers are treate as criminals even though cigarettes are legal and the government loves taxing them
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- Simply because something has not been outlawed is a poor reason to die from lung cancer.













