Does parental smoking cessation discourage adolescent smoking?
GROUND: We examined the relationship of smoking cessation in parents to smoking and uptake and cessation by their adolescent children. METHODS: We analyzed a cross-sectional sample of 4,502 adolescents, ages 15-17 years, who lived in two-parent households that were interviewed as part of the 1992-1993 Tobacco Supplement of the Current Population Survey, which questioned householders 15 years of age and older about their smoking history. Ever smokers reported smoking at least 100 cigarettes in their lifetime. Former smokers were ever smokers who had quit. RESULTS: Multivariate analyses, adjusted for demographic characteristics of adolescents, as well as father’s age, education, and family income, found that adolescents whose parents had quit smoking were almost one-third less likely to be ever smokers than those with a parent who still smoked. Furthermore, adolescent ever smokers whose parents quit smoking were twice as likely to quit as those who had a parent who still smoked. Parental