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Despite all
that is known of the devastating health consequences of smoking, 22.0
percent of women smoked cigarettes in 1998. Cigarette smoking became
prevalent among men before women, and smoking prevalence in the United
States has always been lower among women than among men. However, the
once-wide gender gap in smoking prevalence narrowed until the mid-1980s and
has since remained fairly constant. Smoking prevalence today is nearly three
times higher among women who have only 9 to 11 years of education (32.9
percent) than among women with 16 or more years of education (11.2 percent).
In 2000, 29.7 percent of high school senior girls reported
having smoked within the past 30 days. Smoking prevalence among white girls
declined from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, followed by a decade of
little change. Smoking prevalence then increased markedly in the early
1990s, and declined somewhat in the late 1990s. The increase dampened much
of the earlier progress. Among black girls, smoking prevalence declined
substantially from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s, followed by some
increases until the mid-1990s. Data on long-term trends in smoking
prevalence among high school seniors of other racial or ethnic groups are
not available. |