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Kids of divorced parents likelier to smoke

Updated on: 18 March,2013 11:53 AM IST  | 
ANI |

Children of divorced parents are significantly more likely to start smoking in comparison to their peers from intact families, according to a new study

Kids of divorced parents likelier to smoke

An analysis of 19,000 Americans by the University of Toronto shows that men who experienced parental divorce before they turned 18 had 48-per-cent higher odds of ever smoking 100 or more cigarettes than men whose parents did not divorce.


Women from divorced families were also at risk, with 39-per-cent higher odds of smoking in comparison to women from intact families.


“Finding this link between parental divorce and smoking is very disturbing,” says lead author Esme Fuller-Thomson, Sandra Rotman Chair at University of Toronto’s Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work.


“We had anticipated that the association between parental divorce and smoking would have been explained by one or more of three plausible factors, such as lower levels of education or adult income among the children of divorce; adult mental health issues, such as depression or anxiety among the children of divorce, or other co-occurring early childhood traumas, such as parental addictions or childhood physical, sexual or emotional abuse.

Sex and relationships, kids of divorced parents likelier to smoke
Representational picture

“Each of these characteristics has been shown in other studies to be linked with smoking initiation. However, even when we took all these factors into account, a strong and significant association between parental divorce and smoking remained.”

In the study entitled “The Gender-Specific Association Between Childhood Adversities and Smoking in Adulthood: Findings from a Population Based Study,” investigators examined a representative sample of 7,850 men and 11,506 women aged 18 and over, drawn from the Center for Disease Control’s 2010 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey. A total of 1,551 sons and 2,382 daughters had experienced their parents’ divorce before the age of 18. A total of 4,316 men and 5,072 women reported that they had smoked at least 100 cigarettes in their life.

From this study, researchers cannot determine why parental divorce is linked to smoking initiation.

However, co-author Joanne Filippelli, a University of Toronto doctoral student, suggests it is possible that “children upset by their parents’ divorce may use smoking as a coping mechanism to regulate emotions and stress.

The study has been published in the journal Public Health.

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