Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9206250 | Preventive Medicine | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Education appeared to uniquely contribute to the prediction of smoking abstinence over and above the effects of demographic, environmental, tobacco dependence, transtheoretical model, and job-related variables. Obtaining a better understanding of how or why education influences smoking cessation could contribute to reducing the educational gradient in abstinence and warrants further research attention.
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Authors
David W. Ph.D., Ludmila Ph.D., Jennifer E. Ph.D., Rachel T. Ph.D., Kelli Ph.D., Patricia Ph.D., Carlos Ph.D., Paul M. Ph.D., Ellen R. Ph.D.,