Places to Smoke: Exploring Smoking-Related Practices among Danish Adolescents
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. The Empirical Context
3.1.1. Participant Observation
3.1.2. Focus Groups
3.2. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Smoking Practices: (Re)Placing Smoking
After a few days, I became aware of a behavioral pattern among two students. Every day, Simon and Carlo would leave during break time at 11:15. However, Carlo is absent a lot, and on days when he is not at school, Simon leaves on his own or invites one of the other students from the class to join him. On this particular day, Simon and Kristian leave together. I follow them out of class into the hallway, “Simon and Kristian, may I join you?” Simon looks at me, “Yes, sure you can.” Simon and Kristian start to walk, and I follow them. We walk to the school parking lot. “Where are you going?” I ask. Simon turns to me, “we are heading for the bushes”, he says and gestures with his head towards the end of the parking lot. The parking lot is next to fields, but there is a thicket at the boundary. We go into the bushes so that we can’t be seen from outside. Simon takes a pack of cigarettes from his fanny pack and lights one. Empty cigarette packs are strewn around at the ground, indicating that we are not the first to come here for a smoke. A group of boys from a different grade comes into the bushes. They stand in a short distance from us and all light a cigarette.(Field note extract, School A)
4.2. Smoking Ban: the (Un)Acceptable Smoking Practices
Hellum: I’ve always felt that we were a young class. When we were in the third grade, for example, and looked up to the eighth graders, they just seemed so grown up–smoking and driving scooters. Now we’re up here, and I still feel that we’re young.Sofie: Not immature but not mature. We’re not like… We don’t drink and all that.Moderator: Immature?Sofie: No, not that it’s immature. But those that are older, for example, they finished school some years ago, but they were really forward. I mean, not that we’re immature; we’re mature because we’re careful.(focus group, School B)
Martin: No, not even the cleaning ladies respect it [the smoking rules].Pelle: No, not at all.Martin: They are standing right outside the multifield and smoke. They leave the school area, but they [go for a] smoke.(focus group, School B)
4.3. Places to Smoke: The (Anti)Social in Smoking
Simon: We talk to the persons standing over there, and we don’t usually talk to them.Moderator: Yes?Simon: That’s how it is, sort of.Marikka: That’s how you make new friends.(focus group, School A)
It’s kind of a shame that your friends just desert you. But I can also perfectly understand that if they’re addicted to smoking now or something, then they should probably be allowed to do it … but it’s a little annoying that they don’t just do it during breaks but in the middle of class. Sometimes we only have a 10-min break before the next lesson starts and then they just go outside and smoke.(focus group, School A)
Simon: Yeah, but Mads says it every time, you know. Even if he … I’ve only been gone for two minutes, and he’ll ask, ‘have you just been out smoking?’ That’s a bit strange. Like, a bit…Marikka: Yeah, he’s like super annoying, so he always has to make some shitty comment.Moderator: You think it’s annoying that he comments on it?Carlos: Yes.Simon: Yes, also just because he talks, even when there are other classes, he talks loudly about it. And it’s not because you don’t want them to know, but that you actually couldn’t care less. But then–why even…?(focus group, School A)
Ruben: It [smoking] might make a worse first impression. No, I don’t know.Moderator: Yes?Ruben: it was just to say something. [Laughs]Fie: Oh Rub [nickname of Ruben]!Moderator: A bad first impression?Ruben: Yeah, a little. It probably depends on whether they’re nice when talking to them, then it goes away again quick … It’s just that if there are a lot of people over here smoking, then you might not want to go over to them. Because, yeah, I don’t know.(focus group, School A)
“I feel a bit like… Now I’m just using the ninth grade as an example. If you know that some of the ninth graders smoke, you get a kind of overall idea–a prejudice about what they’re like and, ‘that’s probably not someone you want to talk to because they smoke’.”(focus group, School B)
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Glenstrup, S.; Bast, L.S.; Danielsen, D.; Andersen, A.; Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, T. Places to Smoke: Exploring Smoking-Related Practices among Danish Adolescents. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020386
Glenstrup S, Bast LS, Danielsen D, Andersen A, Tjørnhøj-Thomsen T. Places to Smoke: Exploring Smoking-Related Practices among Danish Adolescents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):386. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020386
Chicago/Turabian StyleGlenstrup, Stine, Lotus Sofie Bast, Dina Danielsen, Anette Andersen, and Tine Tjørnhøj-Thomsen. 2021. "Places to Smoke: Exploring Smoking-Related Practices among Danish Adolescents" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020386
APA StyleGlenstrup, S., Bast, L. S., Danielsen, D., Andersen, A., & Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, T. (2021). Places to Smoke: Exploring Smoking-Related Practices among Danish Adolescents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(2), 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020386