• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
NNEDShare

NNEDShare

Communities Exchanging Ideas

  • Innovative Interventions
  • Resource Library
  • About NNEDshare
  • I’d Like to Share
  • NNED.net

Young Adult Smoking Risk Factors: Impulsivity, Regular Alcohol Use, Poor Grades

September 23, 2013

A new study finds three risk factors for smoking among young adults are being impulsive, using alcohol regularly and receiving low grades in school. The study included 1,293 teens, who were followed from ages 12 to 24. By age 22, three-quarters of the teens had tried smoking. The researchers from the University of Montreal found 44 percent started before they entered high school, 43 percent started during high school and 14 percent started some time in the six years after high school.

Impulsivity, regular alcohol use and poor grades were associated with starting to smoke in the six years after high school. The findings appear in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

Study researcher Jennifer O’Loughlin said one possible reason impulsive teens start smoking after high school is that their parents are no longer able to exert control. “We can postulate that parents of impulsive children exercise tighter control when they are living with them at home to protect their children from adopting behaviors that can lead to smoking, and this protection may diminish over time,” she said in a news release.

She added that teens who have difficulty in school may be more likely to drop out and find work in places where smoking rates are higher. She noted that drinking may be linked to starting to smoke because it reduces inhibitions and self control.

“Our study indicates that it is also important to address prevention among young adults, especially because advertising campaigns of tobacco companies specifically target this group,” she said. “This is particularly important because if we can prevent smoking onset among young adults, the likelihood that they will never become smokers is high,” she says.

Population of focus: Teens and young adults

Links to resource:

  • News article on The Partnership at DrugFree.org
  • Abstract of study — Incidence and Determinants of Cigarette Smoking Initiation in Young Adults

Date: 2013

Journal: Journal of Adolescent Health

Primary Sidebar

Quick Search

  • Reset

Recent Posts

  • Body Project
  • Issue Brief: Co-Occurring Mental Health and Substance Use
  • Practical Guide for Expanding the Community-based Behavioral Health Workforce
  • Vision of You
  • Evidence-Based Guide: Suicide Prevention Strategies for Underserved Youth

Footer

The NNED has been a multi-agency funded effort with primary funding by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

It is managed by SAMHSA and the Achieving Behavioral Health Excellence (ABHE) Initiative.

Contact • Join the NNED // Copyright © 2025 NNED