Academic Achievement and Smoking Initiation

This particular topic has been studied before and even commented on by me. But it bears repeating, especially when a great study comes out and tells us something we all suspected in the first place. The question is this, if people who have greater college education smoke less, then how far back can we trace this phenomona? In other words, do lower achievers in say, high school, middle school or even elementary school, have a greater propensity to end up a smoker?

I love the journal Addiction. They publish some really unique studies on nicotine addiction. The researchers here have really hit a home run, or at least I think so. They evaluated 741 kids with absolutely no history of smoking in the 7th grade, this is in Canada. They followed these kids for 4 years up through grade 10. Here's what they found.

Based on the grade point average (GPA) of the students, three academic achievement levels or what they call trajectories were identified: high achievers (HA), average achievers (AA) and unstable low achievers (ULA). ULA made up about 12% of the total studied population. Within these three groups were identified different rates of smoking initiation.

HA   - 7.1% initiation
AA   - 15.1% initiation
ULA - 49.1% initiation

Lets see if we can identify a trend. Hum, it's on the tip of my tongue. Pretty startling isn't it. In addition, they found that ULA students who had involved and educated parents were less likely to initiate smoking.

It looks as if apathy is the largest contributor to smoking initiation. Here comes my sweeping, broad stroked statement - kids who aren't taught to care about their education by their parents seem doomed to repeat their parents' mistakes. Now granted, some of these kids have very difficult family situations, but I'm sure those exist in all the populations studied.

The point is this, education seems to matter, especially when it comes to smoking. The less educated smoke more. Those identified early in adolescence as low achievers will end up smoking more. This is great to know because that means we can intervene in this time of their life and potentially break the cycle of addiction before it starts. Nicotine and the brain do not mix, especially at such a young age. But it seems we can do something about it. So talk to your kids before he/she gets to 7th grade about how smoking is stupid and how it kills people. We do it here all the time and my kids are totally grossed out by smoking and think it's the worst thing ever.