Some 19 per cent of students between the ages of 13 and 17 who participated in the Global Tobacco Youth Survey (GTYS) in 2006 have indicated their intention to continue smoking.
"What this study found was that almost one-third of students who confessed to having parents who smoke indicated that they intend to smoke in the future while 16 per cent of students whose parents did not smoke say they intended to smoke in the future. So there is a correlation, we feel, between parents who smoke and the projected use of the cigarette in our adolescent population that we studied," revealed Ellen Campbell-Grizzle of the National Council on Drug Abuse (NCDA) at a forum last Thursday.
Dr. Campbell-Grizzle was giving a presentation on 'Tobacco: Impact on Jamaica's Youth' at the NCDA-organised forum at the Eden Gardens Hotel.
Parent angle
She noted that the parent-child link to smoking was of concern to health planners in light of the correlation between smoking and
chronic diseases. "Our adolescents underestimate the addictiveness of nicotine. They believe that they'll be able to quit in five to six years, but the studies show that 75 per cent are still smoking five to six years later," Dr. Campbell-Grizzle said.
She explained that 61 per cent of the respondents in GTYS study indicated that they wanted to quit and that 62 per cent say they had tried to stop while about 69 per cent received help to stop smoking.