Stage of change, low income and benefit status: a profile of women's smoking in early pregnancy

Author:

Batten Liz1,Graham Hilary2,High Sue3,Ruggiero Laurie4,Rossi Joseph5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology

2. Department of Applied Social Science, Cartmel College, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YL

3. Department of Social Statistics, University of Southampton

4. Department of Psychology and Health Promotion Partnership

5. Department of Psychology and Cancer Prevention Research Center, University of Rhode Island

Abstract

Smoking cessation interventions in the UK are being developed in the context of widening socio-economic differentials in both prevalence and cessation. These differ entials are evident among pregnant women, the group targeted for interventions directed at women. Recent research has suggested that, among the disadvantages associated with low socio-economic status, being dependent on means-tested benefits may be a particularly powerful influence on snuokimg status and a major barrier to quitting. Intervention programmes have been heavily influenced by the transtheoretical model, which maps the quitting process as a patterned sequeuce of 'stages of change'. However, little is known about the stage-of-change profile in the UK population or about the socio- economic patterning of the profile. This paper begins to fill these gaps in the knowledge base of health promotion with respect to women in pregnancy. It reports on a survey of 2000 expectant mothers conducted in 1996 in the West Midlands. First pregnancy was found to have an intervention-like effect, with a high proportion of first-time expectant mothers who entered pregnancy as smokers either planning to quit or having done so. This intervention-like effect was moderated by women's socio-economic circumstances. Being in receipt of means-tested benefits increased the odds of a woman not intending to give up smoking in the foreseeable future.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference30 articles.

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