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Title: Educational Pathways and Cigarette Smoking in Early and Mid-Adulthood: Findings from the NLSY79 Cohort
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1. Walsemann, Katrina Michelle
Educational Pathways and Cigarette Smoking in Early and Mid-Adulthood: Findings from the NLSY79 Cohort
Presented: Boston MA, Gerontological Society of America (GSA) Annual Scientific Meeting, November 2018
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Gerontological Society of America
Keyword(s): Cigarette Use (see Smoking); Education, Adult; Educational Attainment

Over the past four decades, educational disparities in tobacco use have widened in the United States. At the same time, there has been an increase in the prevalence of non-normative educational pathways -- that is, the length of time it takes to complete one's education. I take advantage of these two historical trends by examining the relationship between educational pathways and daily smoking in early (~30-35 years) and mid-adulthood (~50-55 years) using prospective and retrospective data from the National Longitudinal Study of Youth 1979 (NLSY79). The NLSY79 cohort is ideal for examining this question because they entered adulthood after the Surgeon General's Report and as educational pathways became more heterogeneous. I expect respondents who attained a bachelor's degree by their early 20’s will have similar rates of smoking in early adulthood, but lower rates of smoking in mid-adulthood, than respondents who attained a bachelor's degree after their early 20's.
Bibliography Citation
Walsemann, Katrina Michelle. "Educational Pathways and Cigarette Smoking in Early and Mid-Adulthood: Findings from the NLSY79 Cohort." Presented: Boston MA, Gerontological Society of America (GSA) Annual Scientific Meeting, November 2018.