Publication | Closed Access
Developmental Trajectories of Cigarette Smoking and Their Correlates From Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood.
173
Citations
45
References
2004
Year
Tobacco CessationSubstance UseEarly AdolescenceAdolescenceDevelopmental PsychologyLatent Growth MixtureTobacco ControlDevelopmental TrajectoriesNicotinePublic HealthHealth SciencesCigarette SmokingBehavioral SciencesTobacco UseHealth PromotionAdolescent DevelopmentAdolescent StudiesEpidemiologySubstance AbuseAddictionHealth BehaviorDevelopmental ScienceIntervention EffortsLate IncreasersVaping
Smoking initiation typically occurs in adolescence and increases over time into emerging adulthood. Thus adolescence and emerging adulthood compose a critical time period for prevention and intervention efforts. To inform these efforts, this study used latent growth mixture modeling to identify 6 smoking trajectories from ages 13 to 23 among 5,914 individuals: nonsmokers (28%), stable highs (6%), early increasers (10%), late increasers (10%), decreasers (6%), and triers (40%). By age 23, the trajectories merged into 2 distinct groups of low- and high-frequency and their standing on age 23 outcomes reflected this grouping. Consideration of these results can help researchers identify at-risk individuals before their smoking becomes too problematic, providing an opportunity for intervention and possible prevention of nicotine dependence.
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