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1.
Nurs Open ; 6(3): 754-764, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31367397

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To examine the association between peer relations, self-rated health and smoking behaviour in vocational school setting. BACKGROUND: Smoking in adolescence causes health and socioeconomic inequality in adulthood. There is evidence that smokers are physically less active, have lower academic aspirations and perceive poorer health than non-smokers. METHOD: The study was conducted in spring 2013 and involved 34,776 vocational students who took part in the School Health Promotion Study in Finland. The associations between adolescent smoking habits and peer relations and smokers' self-rated health were studied adjusting for the respondents' age, parental education and family type. RESULTS: A substantial proportion of the respondents, 37% of the girls and 36% of the boys, reported smoking daily, 15% of the girls and 14% boys smoked occasionally with a further 15% of the girls and 13% of the boys stating that they were ex-smokers. Of the girls, 33% and 38% of the boys were non-smokers. Adjusted multinomial regression revealed that having a close friend or friends predicted smoking among girls and boys. Additionally, the adjusted model indicated that being a bully and/or a bully + bully-victim was associated with smoking behaviour in boys only. Boys and girls who rated their health as moderate or poor were more often daily smokers; in girls, this was also the case in occasional smokers. CONCLUSION: Smoking prevention aimed at vocational schools should take into consideration the norms and expectations related to peer relations which strongly influence adolescents' smoking habits.

2.
Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being ; 14(1): 1610274, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31107188

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Based on focus groups, we analyse how practical nursing students deal with being as smokers and future healthcare workers. The way they justify their smoking is discussed within a group of peers. METHODS: The study has a qualitative design with an inductive approach using focus group interviews (FGIs) for data collection. A total of 29 students were interviewed in five groups of five and one group of four participants. RESULTS: In the analysis, we found four different discursive practices the students utilized for rationalizing their own smoking and coping with the moral dilemma of smoking in a context of health care where smoking is forbidden: (1) students normalized smoking with references to its prevalence within their social circles, (2) the students asserted that their smoking was under control, (3) students considered themselves responsible smokers, and (4) students identified smoking as a part of their identity. CONCLUSION: Training should support the growth of professional identity and address the smoker's identity right from the start of education. Smokers need special attention in the formulation of professional identity, however, without being stigmatized any further.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Nursing, Practical , Smoking , Students, Nursing/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Finland , Focus Groups , Humans , Nursing, Practical/education , Qualitative Research , Young Adult
3.
Health Promot Int ; 33(5): 846-857, 2018 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28549167

ABSTRACT

The present study examined whether parental involvement in their adolescents' lives is associated with adolescent smoking in a vocational school setting when controlling for socioeconomic background and parental smoking. The study was conducted in spring 2013 and involved 34 776 Finnish vocational school students (mean age 17.6 years). The data were analyzed using multinomial regression. The results showed that lower parental involvement was significantly associated with adolescent daily smoking in both genders and with occasional smoking in girls. Parental daily smoking predicted adolescent daily smoking, and this association was also seen for those adolescents whose mother and father had quitted smoking. Furthermore, our results indicate that mothers' smoking may be more influential on adolescents' smoking than fathers' smoking. Multivariate analysis showed that living in a nuclear family or alternately with both parents in two homes decreased daily smoking in both genders compared to living in other family arrangements.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior , Parents/psychology , Smoking/psychology , Vocational Education , Adolescent , Female , Finland , Humans , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Schools , Students , Surveys and Questionnaires
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