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Gender, social pressure, and smoking cessations: the Community Intervention Trial for Smoking Cessation (COMMIT) at baseline.

机译:性别,社会压力和戒烟:基线戒烟社区干预试验(COMMIT)。

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This study was undertaken to examine gender differences in the perception of social constraints against smoking and to explore the role of other sociodemographic and smoking factors that influence the perception of social pressure. Baseline data from the 20 U.S. sites in the National Cancer Institute's Community Intervention Trial for Smoking Cessation (COMMIT) were analyzed. We found that women were less likely than men to be heavy smokers and to report that smoking had affected their health, but more likely to report behavior indicating physiological addiction (timing of first cigarette). At all smoking levels, women were about twice as likely as men to report feeling pressure to quit, after adjusting for education, income, ethnic group, age, and other factors. The source of pressure, however, was different: more women report pressure from their children, whereas more men report pressure from friends and coworkers. Women were equally likely as men to make quit attempts, after adjusting for other factors, but were less likely to remain abstinent for at least 10 days. Women, regardless of education, ethnicity, and age, reported a greater tendency to ask permission before smoking in non-restricted public places. College-educated men were less likely than men without college education to smoke without asking in non-restricted places, but education did not influence whether women asked permission. For both sexes, smoking level and nicotine dependence were significant predictors of lighting up without asking in public places, after adjustment for other variables. We discuss these findings and their implications for the gender gap in smoking cessation and women's conflicting pressures to stop/continue smoking. Tobacco control efforts are discussed within the context of gender differences in social norms, roles, socialization, and communication cultures.
机译:这项研究的目的是检验在对吸烟的社会制约因素的认识上的性别差异,并探讨影响社会压力感知的其他社会人口统计学和吸烟因素的作用。分析了美国国家癌症研究所的戒烟社区干预试验(COMMIT)中美国20个站点的基准数据。我们发现,女性比男性更容易吸烟,并且报告吸烟影响了他们的健康,但更有可能报告表明生理上瘾的行为(定时吸烟)。在调整了教育程度,收入,族裔,年龄和其他因素后,在所有吸烟水平下,女性报告戒烟压力的可能性约为男性的两倍。然而,压力的来源却不同:更多的妇女报告来自子女的压力,而更多的男性报告来自朋友和同事的压力。在调整了其他因素后,女性与男性尝试戒烟的可能性相同,但戒酒至少10天的可能性较小。在不受限制的公共场所吸烟之前,妇女,不论其教育程度,种族和年龄如何,都倾向于在获得许可之前寻求许可。受过大学教育的男人比没有接受过大学教育的男人在不受限制的地方吸烟而不要求吸烟的可能性要小,但是受教育程度不会影响妇女是否需要许可。对男女而言,在调整其他变量之后,吸烟水平和尼古丁依赖性是无需在公共场所询问就可以照亮的重要预测指标。我们讨论了这些发现及其对戒烟中的性别差距以及妇女在停止/继续吸烟方面相互矛盾的压力的影响。在社会规范,角色,社会化和交流文化中的性别差异的背景下讨论了控烟工作。

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