Abstract

BackgroundPrevious studies have reported that spousal non-smoking has a spillover effect on the partner’s cessation. However, discussion is lacking on the factors modifying that association. We examined whether the spillover effect of spousal non-smoking was associated with the couple’s educational attainment.MethodsWe used paired marital data from the Japanese Study on Stratification, Health, Income, and Neighborhood (J-SHINE), which targeted residents aged 25–50 years in four Japanese municipalities. We selected a spouse smoker at the time of marriage (target respondent), and set his/her smoking status change (continued or quit smoking after marriage) as an outcome, regressed on the counterpart’s smoking status (continued smoking or non-smoking) and combinations of each couple’s educational attainment as explanatory variables using log-binomial regression models (n =1001 targets; 708 men and 293 women).ResultsRegression results showed that a counterpart who previously quit smoking or was a never-smoker was associated with the target male spouse’s subsequent cessation. However, for women, the association between husband’s non-smoking and their own cessation was significant only for couples in which both spouses were highly educated.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that a spouse’s smoking status is important for smoking cessation interventions in men. For women, however, a couple’s combined educational attainment may matter in the interventions.

Highlights

  • Previous studies have reported that spousal non-smoking has a spillover effect on the partner’s cessation

  • Among individual characteristics affecting smoking initiation and cessation, researchers have focused on age [4], gender [5], educational background [6,7], and other sociodemographic factors [8]

  • Data Data from the Japanese Study on Stratification, Health, Income, and Neighborhood (J-SHINE) project were used for this study, details of which are described elsewhere [23]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have reported that spousal non-smoking has a spillover effect on the partner’s cessation. We examined whether the spillover effect of spousal non-smoking was associated with the couple’s educational attainment. Smoking is a risk factor associated with the incidence of various non-communicable diseases. Among individual characteristics affecting smoking initiation and cessation, researchers have focused on age [4], gender [5], educational background [6,7], and other sociodemographic factors [8]. In parallel with the studies of individual factors, many researchers have studied the influence of family, especially a spouse, on smoking cessation among married people [9,10,11,12]. Using self-reported life histories of smoking behavior, Monden et al [10] found that respondents living with an ex-smoker or never-smoker spouse were more likely to quit smoking than respondents living with a current smoker

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call