Abstract

Based on theories of social desirability bias, it was hypothesized that smoking, which may be socially undesirable in some religious circles, might therefore be under-reported by more religious persons. To test this hypothesis, data were examined from a cross-sectional survey of Americans, the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). Participants were American women and men aged 20 years and over. Measurements included self-reported frequency of attendance at religious services and of cigarette smoking, and measured serum cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine. Among smokers aged 20 and over, under-reporting of smoking did not vary appreciably with frequency of attendance. An exception to this was non-African American men aged 20-59 and African American men aged 60 and over, who showed greater reporting bias among infrequent attenders, even after controlling for socio-demographic variables. No evidence for greater underreporting of smoking among more religious persons was found.

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