Identifying gender differences among Romanian non-smoking junior high school students.

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to assess gender differences regarding perceptions of smoking between Romanian non-smoking boys and girls, to facilitate the development of effective smoking prevention programmes. METHODS Cross-sectional data were obtained in 2006 by means of written questionnaires among 981 non-smoking school students aged 13-14 years from Cluj-Napoca, Romania. RESULTS The results reveal that girls were more convinced than boys that smoking would result in several positive outcomes such as helping them getting more attention and becoming easier part of the crowd. Moreover, girls declared lower self-efficacy in refraining from smoking when friends smoke or offer them a cigarette. Parental norms regarding smoking seem to be less restrictive for boys than for girls. CONCLUSIONS The gender differences found in our study do not warrant specific smoking prevention programmes for boys and girls, but it is advisable to include gender-specific issues in prevention activities targeting Romanian adolescents aged 13-14 years.

[1]  K. Polańska,et al.  Tobacco advertisements targeted on women: creating an awareness among women. , 2011, Central European journal of public health.

[2]  H. de Vries,et al.  Smoking among Romanian adolescents: do the gender differences exist? , 2009, Pneumologia.

[3]  T. Wills,et al.  Motives for smoking and drinking: country and gender differences in samples of Hungarian and US high school students. , 2007, Addictive behaviors.

[4]  H. de Vries,et al.  Predictors of smoking stage transitions for adolescent boys and girls. , 2007, Preventive medicine.

[5]  Sang-Nam Jeon,et al.  [The determinants of adolescent smoking by gender and type of school in Korea]. , 2006, Journal of preventive medicine and public health = Yebang Uihakhoe chi.

[6]  A. Amos,et al.  Young people, smoking and gender--a qualitative exploration. , 2006, Health education research.

[7]  Hein de Vries,et al.  The European Smoking prevention Framework Approach (ESFA): effects after 24 and 30 months. , 2006, Health education research.

[8]  Hywel R. Thomas,et al.  What determines future smoking intentions of 12- to 13-year-old UK African-Caribbean, Indian, Pakistani and white young people? , 2004, Health education research.

[9]  H. de Vries,et al.  The European Smoking Prevention Framework Approach (ESFA): short-term effects. , 2003, Health education research.

[10]  Manel Nebot,et al.  The European Smoking Prevention Framework Approach (EFSA): an example of integral prevention. , 2003, Health education research.

[11]  Ilse Mesters,et al.  Short-term effects of a randomized computer-based out-of-school smoking prevention trial aimed at elementary schoolchildren. , 2002, Preventive medicine.

[12]  L. Kux OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Food and Drug Administration , 2014 .

[13]  C. Perry,et al.  Tobacco-use psychosocial risk profiles of girls and boys in urban India: implications for gender-specific tobacco intervention development. , 2010, Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.

[14]  G. Guindon,et al.  Tobacco control country profiles , 2003 .

[15]  L. Maes,et al.  Gender differences in smoking in young people , 2002 .

[16]  Nancy E. Adler,et al.  Factors Influencing Agreement between Self-Reports and Biological Measures of Smoking among Adolescents. , 1996 .