Résumé :
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[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS MqLR0xua. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Study objective : To incorporate women's domestic trajectories and circumstances into analyses of the socioeconomic influences on women's smoking status (current and former smoking) in early adulthood. Design : Cross sectional survey Setting : Southampton, UK. Participants : 8437 women aged 25-34 recruited from 1998-2002 via patient lists of general practices Main results : Domestic lifecourse factors contributed to the odds of being a current smoker and former smoker in models that included conventional measures of the socioeconomic lifecourse. Early motherhood, non-cohabitation, and lone motherhood increased the odds of smoking ; early motherhood and non-cohabitation reduced the odds of former smoking. For example, relative to childless women, odds ratios (OR) for women who had become mothers=22, the odds ratio for smoking for those leaving school
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