Title of article
Social influences on smoking cessation: a comparison of the effect of six social influence variables
Author/Authors
Bas van den Putte، نويسنده , , Marco C. Yzer، نويسنده , , Suzanne Brunsting، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
8
From page
186
To page
193
Abstract
Background
This study brings together the fragmentary knowledge on social influence factors related to smoking cessation. An inventory of social influence variables shows six social influence factors. With the exception of descriptive norm, most of these are rarely studied in the context of smoking cessation.
Methods
Regression analysis on the data of 2895 smokers was used to estimate the relative importance of social influence variables as predictors of intention. The moderating effect of quit history was studied by adding interaction terms to the regression analysis.
Results
The regression analysis shows that subjective norm and injunctive norm, that is, the social norms on what ought to be done, are more important than descriptive norms, that is, the perceived smoking and smoking cessation behavior of others. This holds especially for smokers whose past cessation attempts quickly failed. Most smokers think that it is acceptable to smoke in most social situations, but simultaneously think that other people approve it if they quit smoking.
Conclusions
Results suggest that health campaigns should incite social interaction to increase smokersʹ awareness of social norms on the proper behavior. Also, studies into smoking cessation should take account of the various social influence factors outlined in this study.
Keywords
Social influences , Interpersonal relations , health behavior , Smoking Cessation
Journal title
Preventive Medicine
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Preventive Medicine
Record number
804253
Link To Document