Health Status > Adolescents
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CIGARETTE SMOKING
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As reported in the Monitoring the Future Study,
cigarette smoking declined among 10th and 12th graders but remained
stable for 8th graders between 2004 and 2005. Among 10th graders,
14.9 percent reported smoking at least once during the previous
30 days in 2005, compared to 16.0 percent the year before. The rate
among 12th graders dropped from 25.0 to 23.2 percent over the same
period. Overall, there has been a 56 percent decline among 8th graders
and a 51 percent decline among 10th graders since use peaked among
those grades in 1996. Among 12th graders, use peaked in 1997 and
has seen a more modest decline of 36 percent. Factors that appear
to have contributed to this decline include increases in perceived
risk and disapproval of smoking, high cigarette prices, and anti-smoking
advertising campaigns.
The teen smoking rate increased substantially
between 1991 and 1996. Increases occurred in virtually every sociodemographic
group: both sexes, those planning on attending college and not,
those living in all four regions of the country, those living in
rural and urban areas, and among Whites, Black, and Hispanics. Since
1996, rates have declined across all demographic groups consistently.
Although absolute rates of smoking have declined among adolescents,
certain subgroups are less likely to smoke than others. Students
who are not college-bound are more likely to smoke than their college-bound
peers, and Black adolescents are less likely to smoke cigarettes
than White adolescents. The decline in rates of cigarette smoking
since 1996 is likely to have important long-term health consequences
for this generation of adolescents.
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Line Chart: Any Cigarette Use Among High School Students
in the Past 30 Days, by Grade: 1975-2005
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