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1090198105285330v1
34/4/594    most recent
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First published on August 4, 2006, doi:10.1177/1090198105285330

Health Education & Behavior 2007;34:594.

A more recent version of this article appeared on August 1, 2007
© 2006 Society for Public Health Education

Article

The Myth of Peer Influence in Adolescent Smoking Initiation

Jeffrey Jensen Arnett, PhD*

Clark University, Worchester, MA.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: arnett{at}jeffreyarnett.com.


   Abstract

The widespread belief that peer influence is the primary cause of adolescent smoking initiation is examined and called into question. Correlational and longitudinal studies purporting to demonstrate peer influence are analyzed, and their limitations described. Qualitative interview studies of adolescent smoking initiation are presented as depicting the more complex role of the peer context. Finally, a new model of the role of peers in smoking initiation is offered, with an emphasis on how adolescents' characteristics lead to the selection of their friends, who then provide a peer context that may or may not support smoking.

Key Words: peers, smoking, prevention, youth


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