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Adolescent smoking: the control of mood and body image concerns

Kevin Lucas (Heath Promotion Policy Analyst, East Sussex, Brighton and Hove Health Authority, and Visiting Research Fellow in Health and Social Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK)
Barbara Lloyd (Senior Research Fellow at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK)

Health Education

ISSN: 0965-4283

Article publication date: 1 February 1999

2699

Abstract

Adults use food, alcohol, and drugs, including cigarettes, to alter their mood states. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that adolescents follow a similar course. This paper explores adolescents’ use of cigarettes to moderate negative emotions. The authors examine questionnaire and qualitative data from a longitudinal study of over 3,500 East Sussex secondary school pupils in the context of published accounts of stress, coping and smoking. Together, these studies raise the possibility that smokers perceive more stress in their lives and use different coping strategies from non‐smokers. Results indicate that despite the popular belief that adolescent girls experience greater stress than do teenage boys, the gender differences in smoking prevalence observed in recent years cannot be attributed directly to differences either in perceived stress, or in coping strategies. Finally, beliefs about smoking and weight control are explored in the context of young adolescents’ views about their bodies. The widely held assumption that teenage girls use cigarettes to control body weight is challenged.

Keywords

Citation

Lucas, K. and Lloyd, B. (1999), "Adolescent smoking: the control of mood and body image concerns", Health Education, Vol. 99 No. 1, pp. 17-26. https://doi.org/10.1108/09654289910249093

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited

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