Publication | Closed Access
Stages of smoking acquisition of young Taiwanese adolescents: Self‐Efficacy and decisional balance
18
Citations
31
References
2008
Year
Tobacco CessationEducational PsychologyAdolescent Behavioral HealthEducationPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyTobacco ControlSelf-efficacy TheoryMaintenance StagesPublic HealthSmoking Related Lung DiseaseHealth EducationDecisional BalanceBehavioral SciencesTobacco UseHealth PromotionAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentAdolescent LearningHealth BehaviorYoung Taiwanese AdolescentsMaintenance Stage
The objective of this study was to assess relationships of the stages of smoking acquisition with self-efficacy and decisional balance in young Taiwanese adolescents. A random sample of 401 students was recruited. Students who were at the precontemplation stage had higher self-efficacy to resist smoking initiation than those who were at the decision-making or maintenance stages. Ratings of benefits of smoking were significantly higher for those in the maintenance stage than in the precontemplation or decision-making stages. In a discriminant function analysis, self-efficacy and decisional balance correctly predicted 77.4% of membership in the three stages. Health educators could use stage-specific skills and strategies based on self-efficacy and decision balance constructs to develop smoking prevention programs.
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