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Parents Pass Smoking Habits to Children by Gender

Posted 15 months ago|7 comments|897 views
Smoking Kills - Don't Pass it On
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Like Father, Like Son - Parents Pass Smoking Habits to their Children

If you think your cigarette smoking has no impact on your kids, think again. A new study shows that smoking habits follow gender lines in the household. In other words: like father, like son; like mother, like daughter. If there is a smoker in the home then the children are more likely to smoke.

The British Household Panel Survey 1994-2002 data was used to examine the inter-generational implications of smoking habits. This new information may not be a huge surprise because it is at least loosely accepted that children mimic their parents, after all they are primary models for children. The results show just how much smoking habits are passed from parent to child, especially between the same gender, a very important discovery that has implications for anti smoking campaigns.

Looking at the data of two parent homes where the father and mother smoked, the child of the same gender of the smoking parent has a higher likelihood of picking up their parents smoking habits. Smoking rates for sons was 24% and 23% for daughters, but this number drops to 12% for both genders if neither parent smokes. Parents can reduce the chances that their kids will smoke by quitting smoking themselves.

Of note, the highest rate of parent to child smoking was found in single mother households. Smoking habits are passed more significantly to sons than daughters in this case, but both percentages are higher than two parent smoking households. If there was any question that single parent households negatively impact children this is a good place to start.

In single-parent households, mothers transmit their smoking habits to their children -- regardless of their gender. In this case, a son's likelihood of smoking if the mother smokes is 32%, and 28% for a daughter.

Anti-Smoking Campaigns for Parents - Quit for the Kids

The "do as I say, not as I do" model of parenting does not work. Waving a nicotine stained finger at your child does nothing but convey hypocrisy, so parents need to learn how to quit smoking for their own health benefits and their children. Parents who smoke are more likely to have children who smoke. Health risks, heart disease, lung damage, and shorter lifespans are the gifts that smoking parents pass on to their children.

This data suggests that single mothers need better quit smoking aids and focused campaigns. Single mothers should not be targeted negatively because of these statistics. Single mothers who smoke are tasked with modeling both mother and father for their kids. Smoking is used as a stress reliever. Creating anti-smoking campaigns aimed at women will increase their overall health. Any time women's health is increased the entire population benefits.

If you are a smoking parent, make a plan to quit. Get help from nicotine replacement therapy, medication, or whatever you need. There are free quit smoking aids. Quitting smoking is an excellent thing to teach your children.
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COMMENTS
BadCyborg
BadCyborg
San Antonio, TX
15 months ago: BRAVO SIERRA!

Neither my wife nor I smoke nor have we EVER smoked. Yet BOTH of our children smoke.

How does that fit inot that neat little theory your are presenting?

Hmmmmmmm?

Inquiring minds want to know.
15 months ago: That sucks, you should tell them they should quit so their kids don't smoke! And the whole live longer thing... :)

Your kids are in the 12% who smoke regardless of the non-smoking parents. I wonder when they started smoking and if one of them smoking influenced the other to start. I think it would be interesting to do a study on siblings.

I think the most interesting thing is the higher rates among single parents. When I think about the single mothers I know, ALL of them smoke.

Nicotine addiction is very insidious.

Does that help your inquiring mind?!
Out Of The Box
Out Of The Box
 Moderator
15 months ago: I smoke like a chimney, but none of kids wound up smoking either. I always ragged on myself for smoking, telling them it was a sign of my laziness that I wouldn't quit.

But...I seriously think I was hooked before I ever started smoking, because of my Dad's smoking. I never noticed it until he quit smoking when I was about 13 or 14. I starting feeming for a cigarette almost immediately.
15 months ago: Wow, that's crazy (in that completely interesting and thought-provoking way). I wouldn't doubt it, especially if he smoked in the house. Second hand smoke is not given its proper respect. I wouldn't doubt you were addicted before doing it. Smoking is an addiction that changes brain chemistry. I wouldn't doubt that part of the reason kids of smokers smoke is because of genetics.

One thing that makes smoking extra difficult to quit and hard to understand for non-smokers is the repeated "high" that is sent to the brain. If you smoke throughout the day then you'd see something like a heart monitor with peaks and valleys of brain chemistry stimulation by smoking. If that cigarette were alcohol or heroin (that both cause bad withdrawals) then people would absolutely expect a hard time quitting and staying quit. There is no difference really when it comes straight down to brain chemistry. The difference comes in availability and social tolerance, and legality, but smoking is just as dangerous. It just usually doesn't land people in jail. Non-smokers (and smokers) need education about what it really does to the brain to help them quit... I think.

Non quitting or quitting and re-starting in definitely not laziness, that's for sure! It's addiction!

I think it's interesting that people worry about meth houses, where people have been inside smoking meth, because like cigs it gets on the walls, carpets, etc. They worry about breathing in a house that had poison smoking in it. Well, some of the cigarette chemicals are shared by meth. It's just interesting how people classify things I think.

I smoke. Both parents smoked. Both grandparents smoked - on both mom and dad's side. My first cigarette at 12 was from my mom's pack. I think that some of the higher stats come from access. If parents smoke, there's cigarettes.. My step dad chewed. I tried that too.

Thanks for sharing guys! I hope some others do, too. It's actually pretty interesting.
TheLegendTomWing
TheLegendTomWing
 Administrator
Philadelphia, PA
13 months ago: Just saw this, I smoke and parents do not (and did not).

Either way, I don't like this nanny stuff anyway. If people want to smoke, let them.
13 months ago: smoke 'em if you got 'em

I smoke, too. Started at 12. I'd certainly rather that I didn't smoke though.

I am equally addicted to the routine as the crap that fills my lungs. Those short Marlboro 72s are a killer.
7 months ago: RESTORE health AND wealth
Every time is suitable time for quit smoking don't too late health is wealth for everyone and every age.

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