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Title: Contextual Correlates of Adolescents' Self-Efficacy After Smoking Cessation
Author(s): Zundert, R.M.P. van (298981793)
Engels, R.C.M.E. (16717231X)
Kuntsche, E.N. (31875164X)
Publication year: 2011
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors
ISSN: 0893-164X
Volume: vol. 25
Issue: iss. 2
Start page: p. 301
End page: p. 311
Related link(s): http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0023629
Abstract: Recent research has shown that daily changes in self-efficacy predict lapses and relapse into smoking after quitting among adolescent daily smokers, but it is not known if and how momentary self-efficacy is associated with affect-motivational states and external contexts. In the present study, 134 adolescent daily smokers were monitored daily during 1 week prior to and 3 weeks after they began their quit attempt. Participants completed questions on smoking, self-efficacy, affect-motivational states (craving and negative affect), and external contexts (seeing others smoke, experiencing a stressful event, and alcohol and coffee consumption) three times a day. Affect-motivational states as well as all external contexts (except for coffee consumption) were associated with lower self-efficacy when participants were still abstinent, but also after they had lapsed. Associations between the situational contexts and self-efficacy did not largely depend on individual characteristics such as baseline self-efficacy and age. Among girls, however, the negative associations between self-efficacy and negative affect and drinking alcohol were found to be stronger. These results show that adolescents' self-efficacy during a quit attempt may be responsive to affect-motivational states and external contexts, both before and after lapsing.
Subject: Developmental psychopathology
Organization: SW OZ BSI OGG
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/99207

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