Predictors of the Transition From Experimental to Daily Smoking Among Adolescents in the United States
By reviewing the methodology and analysis sections of the study, I discovered that the quantitative method used was a complex sampling design with restricted-use data. The authors of the study used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health as their focus, so they had the opportunity to study a large amount of data without being required to collect it from survey participants or interviews (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009). Examined were strata at the individual student level and schools as clusters, as well as the subjects and their unique selection criteria (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009). There were 134 schools and 90,000 students participating. Each of those students filled out a 45-minute questionnaire regarding expectations for the future, their friendships, and their health (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009).
I found that the covariates, which were demographics, PBT-related, and non-theory related factors, were measured at the baseline (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009). These were then used to be predictive of the smoking status that would be seen in these individuals at the end of the first year they were followed (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009). The smokers who were selected as the sample were between 12 and 18 years old, and where experimental smokers when they were selected for the baseline (Park, Weaver, & Romer, 2009). Only those who also provided outcome information at the end of the first year were...
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