Jason Scott's mother smokes. His father smokes. So does his grandmother
and most of his aunts and uncles. And so when his step-brother handed him
a cigarette when he was 13 years old, Jason Scott began smoking, too.
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Jason Scott, 18, is now an ex-smoker.
Because roommate Terry Driggs is still hooked, there are still
cigarettes in the apartment they share. "It's a temptation," says
Scott, "but I just ignore it." (Lake Fong,
Post-Gazette) |
"I started because nearly everyone in my family smokes," he said. "I
wanted to try it and see what the big deal was."
The big deal was, he got hooked.
Off and on, he's tried to stop. As of March 15, at age 18, Jason
Scott's a quitter.
He attributes his success to a smoking cessation study for teen-agers
that's being conducted by Tahniat Syed, a pediatrician at Children's
Hospital of Pittsburgh.
After graduating from high school in Kirksville, Mo., Scott moved here
to study film-making at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. He saw Syed's
flyer on a bulletin board recruiting 13- to 19-year-olds who wanted to
quit smoking, and he signed up immediately.
"I was ready," Scott said. "I wanted to quit."
The smoking cessation study is testing the effectiveness of a
medication called Zyban, previously used as an anti-depressant for adults
and sold under another brand name. Doctors who prescribed it discovered an
unusual side effect: patients lost their craving for nicotine.
"The exact mechanism is not known, but it's thought to affect the part
of the brain that controls craving," Syed said.
She is looking for 64 participants and so far, nine have enrolled.
"This is clearly a generation at risk, and the numbers are increasing,"
Syed said.
The percentage of teen-age smokers rose from 28 percent to 35 percent
among all racial and ethnic groups from 1991 to 1999, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, she said. In Pennsylvania, 40
percent of high school seniors smoked, compared with 34 percent
nationally, according to 1997 statistics.
"We don't have the exact rates, but the numbers are estimated to be
higher for Allegheny County teen-agers," she said.
Half the control group will receive Zyban, half will receive a placebo
and everyone will receive counseling based on CDC's guidelines.
Zyban's most common side effects are runny nose, dry mouth, difficulty
sleeping and seizures, so teens with seizure disorders won't be able to
participate, she said. Participants will be given a small stipend.
The medication does not contain nicotine, so teens may continue smoking
until their quit date, which is scheduled two to three weeks into the
program. The study will also determine teen-ager's challenges to quitting
and devise solutions.
Scott doesn't know whether he received Zyban or the placebo. He said he
began the study while smoking a pack a day, and soon had cut down to a
less than a half pack a day without realizing it.
About three weeks into the program his smoking had dwindled to one
cigarette a day. When he ran out of cigarettes, he bought one more pack
and when he smoked the last one, he quit.
Counseling helped him identify times he was vulnerable to smoking, such
as after meals and before he went to bed. Scott said this helped him know
when he had to use maximum willpower and concentrate on quitting.
"Teens experience nicotine addiction just like adults do," Syed said.
"They have the same kind of cravings and withdrawal symptoms, but there is
not a lot of help for them."
Some 77 percent of adult smokers began before the age of 20. Many
teen-agers have told Syed that they want to quit. But quitting is as hard
for teens as it is for adults and teens have fewer resources available to
them.
"It's also easy for teens to walk into stores and buy cigarettes, even
though sales to minors are illegal," Syed said.
Although his roommate is a smoker, Scott has no desire to smoke
anymore.
Scott hopes to be a Hollywood movie maker one day. He's seen his share
of glamorous smokers on the big screen. But he thinks when it's his turn,
smokers will be portrayed differently.
"I'll probably use smoking with a villainous character," he said.
"Seeing the good guy light up is not a good thing."

The study is funded by Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and the
Ambulatory Pediatrics Association. Teens interested in participating
should call Syed at 412-692-5527.