Addictive behaviors
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The effectiveness of a smoking cessation campaign that included both printed and televised materials was evaluated in registrant and randomly acquired samples of smokers during the first month postcampaign and again at 3 months. Registrant and random samples differed on several sociodemographic variables. ⋯ Fifteen percent of registrants who had not attempted to quit at Time 1 were abstinent 3 months postcampaign. Registering to participate in print and televised cessation programs may be related to a change in smoking behavior.
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Addictive behaviors · Jan 1991
A comparison of smokeless tobacco and smoking practices of university varsity and intramural baseball players.
To examine the smokeless tobacco (ST) and smoking practices of collegiate varsity and intramural baseball players, 284 undergraduate athletes at two major Southwestern universities were surveyed using a questionnaire previously developed to measure use among this population. About one-fourth of all athletes were current ST users and 4% smokers. Over half of varsity players (53%) compared to 25.9% of intramural players used one or both forms of ST. ⋯ There was no evidence that one form of tobacco served as a gateway for the other among these young adult athletes. Over a fourth of all users started after age 17, suggesting that college is an appropriate locus for both ST prevention and cessation programming. Such programs for this population must address the unique characteristics of the social environment in collegiate baseball.