Can mental health competence reduce the higher risk of smoking initiation among teenagers with parents who smoke?
Author:
Pearce Anna12ORCID,
Rougeaux Emeline2,
Deighton Jessica3,
Viner Russell M2ORCID,
Law Catherine2,
Hope Steven2ORCID
Affiliation:
1. MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
2. Population, Policy and Practice Research and Teaching Department, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UK
3. Evidence Based Practice Unit, UCL and the Anna Freud Centre, London, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Parental smoking strongly influences adolescent smoking, yet few studies have examined factors that may protect against this. We investigated whether skills-based components of positive mental health (‘mental health competence’, MHC) modified the association between parental and teenager smoking, in the UK-representative Millennium Cohort Study (approximately 18 000 children, born 2000–02; analytic sample: n = 10 133).
Methods
Cohort members (CMs) reported at 14 years (y) whether they had ever smoked cigarettes. A dichotomized variable indicated whether one/both parents smoked when CMs were 11 y. A four-class latent MHC measure captured learning skills and prosocial behaviours at 11 y: High, High–Moderate, Moderate, Low. We examined effect measure modification (on the additive scale) by comparing risk differences (RDs) for CM smoking according to parental smoking, within each MHC class. We then estimated RDs for CM smoking according to combinations of parental smoking and MHC. Analyses accounted for confounding, sample design, attrition and item missingness.
Results
CMs were more likely to smoke cigarettes if their parent(s) smoked (27%) than CMs with no parent(s) who smoked (11%; RD: 16%). When stratified by MHC, RDs were stronger for low MHC (21%; 95% CI 11–31%) than other MHC classes (ranging: 7–11%). Compared to CMs with high MHC and non-smoker parents, those with low MHC and parent(s) who smoked had an RD of 28% (95% CI 20–36%). This was greater than the sum of RDs for those with low MHC and non-smoker parent(s) [7% (2–14%)] plus those with high MHC and whose parent(s) smoked [11% (7–15%)]. There was limited effect measure modification by moderate or High–Moderate MHC.
Conclusion
Improving MHC to moderate levels may help reduce intergenerational transference of smoking.
Funder
Policy Research Unit in the Health of Children
Young People and Families
The Policy Research Unit in the Health of Children
Department of Health and Social Care Policy Research Programme
National Institute for Health Research Policy Research Programme
Wellcome Trust
Medical Research Council
Scottish Government Chief Scientist Office
National Institute for Health Research
Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care
North Thames at Bart’s Health NHS Trust
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health