Philip Morris
Why Young People Begin Smoking
Fields
- Area
- NICOLI,DAVID/OFFICE
- Type
- NELE, NEWSLETTER
- Master ID
- 2046926829/6924
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- Request
- Stmn/R1-025
- Stmn/R1-072
- Stmn/R1-092
- Stmn/R1-093
- Stmn/R1-072
- Document File
- 2046926828/2046926925/Briefing Book - Response to Surgeon General's Report on Smoking Released on 000223 - TI, RJR Talking Point.
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Site
- W6
- Author (Organization)
- Tobacco Update
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- ven65e00
Document Images
S
WHY YOUNG PEOPLE
BEGIN SMOKING
A ~ ti-smoking advocates and govemment
r,-~ear~-~ ers have long acknowledged
c'riat rarnuv and peers are the pnmarv
on sr^,c:ung b%S:o inz peo>3ie. :':~z
.:ec- or c: ::.< :'atlonai ;c~snracc ~~f ~:-iid :?ealth
~^d H.;.-:.an J~. N:ovment betore L_~ngress put
,r;unp:,, -he most rorcerui u.term;,.an;s or rokin ;;?~- ", oung Feoplel are parents, peers
a;1G ol :er ~:o~iSl~s.
":,ese lrfluences, ~.L-,likc the asserted i -~Iuence
1)t c:garette au~ e-nsu~~, have ceen ~<<oa n to be
^oth ~ uwNrt.1 and direct.
A nar..;nal study nubLished by thr FrJrrdl kovernr,lesu in
1992 rtiports. "The smoking practices of older brothers or
sisrers living at n,.me were more closeiv ass(xiated with
teen*ger smoking than was parental smoking. Thirty
percent of adole~icer!u reported currentiv smokLng in
nomes wnere ontv older siblings smoked, compared witn
15 penent of teensgers from homes where only their
parents smoked."
"..1,s expected, the smoking pattems fur both teenage boys
arui girls were highly correlated w-ith the 3moking
practices of their closest friends. Teenagers with no best
friends of the same sex who smoked, s-eldom smoked
;about 3 petcent). However, aimost half of adolescents
with at least two best friends who smoked were smokers
dhemseives," the report said.
A fourcountry survey conducted by the World
Heaith Orgaruzation (WHO) ft:rther provides
support for the influences of peers and family as
the most forceful determinants of youth smoking.
r The WHO study, published in 1986, reported:
"Studies of zvhy people start
smoking identify the influences of
parents, siblings, and friends as the
most important causal factors."
THE PRFSD"c v,,'s C,,L'\'cP_ oF Eco\OMIc AJV'Soks
"when young people start s:noking, the most important
predictor is the smoking betravior and smoking-reiated
activities of 'significant others' "
"The strongeyt statistical relationstups act? found with the
smoking habits of the best friend."
The survey also found trat smoking among school
children is "strongly related to the number of smokers in
the familv"
Peers and family members have been repeatedly
demonstrated to play a key role in smoking by
young people. Cigarette advertising, on the
other hand, has not.
Advertising was listed by one percent of respon-
dents in 1991- and not listed at all in 1993 - in
a Gallup survey as the principle influence on the
decision to smoke. Peer pressure and family
influence were cited by almost three-quarters of
respondents as the major factors.
(continued on back)
For mure detailt,d informatinn on this issue and otht,rs, LoriLIot us .it , 1-8()U-424-YSis,.
C., .~-,>..

S
,,JvertLsi,tS ~Se magazine cc;r,missioned a
-~urvey Ln 1992 that reported, despite high
recognition of Ligarette advertising, nine of ten
youngsters thought smoking was "gross." T?1e
^resident of u e research said, "~~.v)e'd haVe
`o interpret ~ us to sati that cigarette advert;sing
i: ce:*.air~v reach:ng die eves of voeu;g chuldren.
(but) i"on't knotiti' how you could argue... t"~ at It
.auses ~ em to ~moke."
