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Release Date: December 18, 2000
Contact: Harry A. Lando
(612)
624-1877
lando@epi.umn.edu
Early Smoking May Predict Stronger Nicotine Dependence Among
Members of Certain Ethnic Group
A large study of U.S. Air Force trainees suggests that starting to smoke at an early
age may pave the way for heavier smoking in adulthood, as well as other unhealthy
behaviors -- at least among European-Americans and Hispanics.
"These findings have important potential public health implications," said
lead author Harry A. Lando of the School of Public Health at the University of Minnesota
in Minneapolis.
"In the absence of successful prevention, even significant delay of smoking onset
could be beneficial in terms of reduced tobacco dependence, greater likelihood of quitting
and less severe health consequences," said Lando.
Lando and colleagues analyzed questionnaire results from nearly 5,000 smokers of
European-American, African-American and Hispanic-American descent entering U.S. Air Force
Basic Military Training from August 1995 to August 1996. The average age of the study
participants was 19.
European-Americans started smoking at the youngest age, followed by Hispanic-Americans
and African-Americans, the researchers found. European-Americans started smoking an
average of more than a year before African-Americans.
Although starting to smoke at a younger age was generally associated with less healthy
behaviors such as eating more high-fat foods and reduced motivation to quit, the
researchers noted ethnic variations among early smokers.
Within each ethnic group, the youngest smoking initiators were the least motivated to
quit. But among European-Americans and Hispanic-Americans, and not among
African-Americans, starting to smoke at an early age predicted higher nicotine dependence
-- and thus heavier smoking -- in adulthood.
European-American and Hispanic early smokers were also more likely to binge drink
(eight or more alcoholic drinks daily) and less likely to wear seatbelts, but this
behavior pattern was not observed among early African-American smokers.
For European-Americans only, earlier smoking was associated with lower levels of
physical activity. European-American early smokers were also substantially less likely to
have quit one year following basic military training.
The researchers report their findings in the current issue of the journal Nicotine
and Tobacco Research.
Lando and colleagues were intrigued by the weaker association between early smoking and
negative lifestyle behaviors in African-Americans and consider this worthy of additional
research. "Perhaps because smoking onset was so late for African-Americans, there was
less opportunity to observe consistent relationships in age of initiation in this young
population of Air Force recruits," Lando speculated.
The researchers also pointed out that more than 75 percent of the Air Force trainee
study participants began smoking before the legal age of cigarette sale. "The high
rate of initiation prior to legal age of sale continues to be of considerable public
health concern," said Lando. "It is critical that age of sale laws be enforced
and that access of minors to tobacco products be reduced."
This study was supported by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
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Nicotine & Tobacco Research is the official peer-reviewed
quarterly journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. For information
about the journal, contact Gary E. Swan, PhD, at (650) 859-5322.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Information Services Manager
202.387.2829
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