2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.02.025
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Factors influencing gender differences in smoking and their separate contributions: Evidence from South Korea

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Cited by 37 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Women who experienced divorce, separation, and death of spouse might get distressed by financial burden and the responsibility of rearing children by themselves, which might increase smoking rate 20,21). Release from social control (telling or reminding someone to engage in certain health behaviors) and loss of social support (support when changing health behavior) from partners might increase the smoking rate further 22). Umberson23) reported that social control and social support have beneficial consequence for health behaviors among those individuals who remain married.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women who experienced divorce, separation, and death of spouse might get distressed by financial burden and the responsibility of rearing children by themselves, which might increase smoking rate 20,21). Release from social control (telling or reminding someone to engage in certain health behaviors) and loss of social support (support when changing health behavior) from partners might increase the smoking rate further 22). Umberson23) reported that social control and social support have beneficial consequence for health behaviors among those individuals who remain married.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This methodology decomposes the observed group difference in outcome into two main components: the disparity associated with the differences in determinants and the disparity associated with the differential response by ethnic groups to those determinants. Several recent studies have applied this methodology to studying disparities in public health including gender differences in smoking (Chung, Lim, & Lee, 2010) and cross-country differences in obesity between the U.S. and Canada (Auld & Powell, 2006) and Spain and Italy (Font, Fabbri, & Gil, 2010). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To avoid a well-known index number problem associated with Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition, we implement a widely used alternative proposed by Neumark [40], which uses the estimated coefficients from the pooled regression as the average estimated effects. Several recent studies applied this methodology to studying disparities in public health including gender differences in smoking [41], cross-country differences in obesity between the USA and Canada [42] and Spain and Italy [43], and racial/ethnic differences in BMI between black-white and Hispanic-white adolescents [9]. In addition to the results from the decomposition analysis, we present results from the pooled cross-sectional ordinary least squares (OLS) analyses by racial and ethnic subgroups.…”
Section: Empirical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%