Abstract
Critiques 1990 Journal of Clinical Epidemiology article by Weinkam and Sterling entitled "Age Related Changes in Age of Starting to Smoke." Challenges current "common beliefs" that "1) There is an increase in individuals in the younger age cohorts (early teens or younger) who take up smoking. 2. The shift of smoking to earlier ages is especially prominent among young women. 3. The prevalence of smoking among women has actually increased." Alleges the first two propositions are the result of calculation errors attributable to different methods used by researchers in computing age classifications. Asserts that third proposition is untrue based on the possibility that the converse, i.e. "fewer older females take up smoking" is the reality and that the "available data show" these propositions to be false. Claims the Weinkam and Sterling paper is an example of "the most clear cut demonstration yet on how exaggerated and erroneous conclusions are made about smoking by sources of great authority and influence in matters of public health."
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1
NOTES ON "AGE RELATED CHANGES IN AGE OF STARTING TO SMOKE" *
This paper published in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
addresses itself to these currently common beliefs:
There is an increase in individuals in the younger age
cohorts (early teens or younger) who take up smoking.
The shift of smoking to earlier ages is especially
prominent among young women.
The prevalence of smoking among women has actually
increased.
The analysis shows that none of the three beliefs are
justified. The first two propositions a~e due to two
separate errors of calculations and the third is simply not
true.
One of the errors (leading to false conclusions in support
of 1 and 2 above) was made by Garfinkel and Stellman of the
American cancer Society and also, in another paper, by
Harris (well known for his work on smoking and health).
That error is of a type that has been made before in the
history of epidemiology (usually to the embarrassment of the
perpetrator). Garfinkel and Stellman and also Harris
compute the average age for starting to smoke separately for
younger and younger birth cohorts (i.e., groups of subjects
classified according to when they were born which in turn
determines their current age) They observed a decreasing
average of starting to smoke for successive birth cohorts of
decreasing age from which they deduce the existence of a
trend by which the typical age at which people start to
smoke is getting progressively younger.
The error in their method is to ignore the fact that the
average age at which any event takes place, computed for
different age groups, actually depends on the age of the
cohort.
So, as a simple example, the average age of starting to
smoke among high school students will always be less than
the average age of starting to smoke among college students,
simply because college students tend to be older than high
school students. Some college students will have taken up
smoking after age 19; few if any high school student can
have done this because almost all are younger than 19. This
"pulls" the average up for college students. -
*Weinkam, J., Sterling, T. "Age Related Changes in Age of
Starting to Smoke". Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
43(2):451-461, 1990.

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A different error (with respect to 1 and 2 above) is
committed by the 1989 Surgeon General's Report. This Report
also bases its conclusions about younger and younger people
taking up smoking on the average age of starting to smoke.
However this Report corrects the estimates of average age of
starting to smoke for age dependency. The Report observes a
progressive decrease in the average age of starting to smoke
with younger years for white females (but not for white
males or for blacks). However, there are two reasons why
such an observation might occur:
It might be true that more younger white females are
starting to smoke, or
It might be true that fewer older females take up
smoking.
By comparing two separate age groups, using data from the
National Center for Health Statistics, the study shows that
the reason for the apparent decline in the average age of
starting to smoke for white females is that proportionately
fewer older females (i.e., late teens) start smoking.
With respect to the third proposition, between 1970 and 1980
the prevalence of smoking among white males younger than 24
years of age decreased by 6% and that of white females for
the same age group decreased by 4.7%. For blacks the
decreases were 12.4% and 7.7% respectively. (However, the
estimates for blacks are less stable than those for whites
because they are based on a relatively small sample.)
The available data show that all three common propositions
about the age of starting to smoke and the prevalence of
smoking among young people are false.
The Weinkam/Sterling paper was carefully reviewed and
satisfied the critical examination of a number of leading
epidemiologists and statisticians. Also, the study's
conclusion concerning the three propositions commonly
encountered are easily verifiable from data available from
the National Center for Health Statistics and from other
sources.
This paper by Weinkam and Sterling furnishes the most clear
cut demonstration yet on how exaggerated and erroneous
conclusions are made about smoking by sources of great
authority and influence in matters of public health. Its
dissemination might help put the status of smoking among
women and the young in a more rational perspective.
