Psychosocial correlates of cigarette smoking abstinence, experimentation, persistence and frequency during adolescence

Abstract
The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to examine and to compare the psychosocial characteristics associated with four dimensions of smoking: abstinence (never vs. ever), experimentation, frequency (daily vs. non-daily), and persistence (former vs. current). Persistent smokers (1 or more years) were contrasted with those who had been able to stop smoking for 1 year or more. From a sample of high school students who were assessed on two occasions (n = 1507), six smoking groups were defined: never smokers (n = 862), experimenters (n = 235), former non-daily (n = 80), current non-daily (n = 73), former daily (n = 71), and current daily (n = 110). The association between the four smoking dimensions and demographic, psychopathology, and psychosocial variables were examined. Differences between the never smokers and the experimenters were relatively small; albeit even minimal use of cigarettes is associated with some level of problems. As found in previous studies, smokers compared to never-smokers had substantially higher scores on most indices of dysfunction. Both frequent and persistent smoking was associated with higher lifetime prevalence of drug abuse/dependence and having more friends who smoke. Smoking persistence was uniquely related to greater conflict with parents and more problematic academic behavior. Smoking frequency was uniquely associated with higher impulsiveness. Gender did not significantly moderate the associations between smoking status and the psychosocial functioning. To the extent that there were differences between the characteristics associated with frequency and persistence, the results have implications for the design of interventions aimed at these dimensions.