Authors
Robert L DeBernardo, Carmen E Aldinger, Omar R Dawood, Robert E Hanson, Sung-Jae Lee, Sally R Rinaldi
Publication date
1999/9/1
Journal
Journal of American College Health
Volume
48
Issue
2
Pages
61-66
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
Responses from 513 of 1,000 randomly selected undergraduate students who were sent an e-mail questionnaire, about cigarette smoking were analyzed. Thirteen percent of the respondents identified themselves as smokers. No statistically significant differences were observed between smokers and non-smokers and year in college, sex, age, race, or having attended public or private high schools. Ninety-eight percent of the respondents considered themselves knowledgeable about adverse health consequences of smoking, yet 39.1% of current smokers seriously considered stopping smoking, and 11.5% of current nonsmokers intended to start smoking. The preferred quitting method of smokers and ex-smokers was stopping all at once (“cold turkey”). Fifty-two percent of the smokers did not want professional assistance to stop smoking; 40% of the nonsmokers wanted information on second-hand smoke.
Total citations
1999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020116967109126777103311112
Scholar articles
RL DeBernardo, CE Aldinger, OR Dawood, RE Hanson… - Journal of American College Health, 1999