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. 2022 Jun 24;24(12):1927–1936. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntac152

Table 2.

Adjusteda Average Marginal Effects (AME) Change in Media Exposure (Tips) on Smoking Susceptibility, 30-day Smoking Prevalence, Daily Smoking Initiation, and First Cigarette Initiation, Monitoring the Future, 2013–2015. Results Shown are Using Imputed Data (m = 10)

8th Graders 10th Graders 12th Graders
AME (95% CI) P-value AME (95% CI) P-value AME (95% CI) P-value
Smoking susceptibility 5 yrs
4-month depreciated (vs. < 25 percentile)
25–50 percentile −0.005 (−0.043, 0.032) .880 0.002 (−0.029, 0.033) .476 −0.029 (−0.055, −0.003) .105
50–75 percentile −0.015 (−0.056, 0.026) 0.011 (−0.028, 0.050) −0.024 (−0.056, 0.008)
>75 percentile −0.004 (−0.042, 0.033) −0.015 (−0.047, 0.018) −0.002 (−0.029, 0.025)
N 10 352 9456 7208
Smoking prevalence
4-month depreciated (vs. < 25 percentile)
25–50 percentile 0.001 (−0.010, 0.012) .741 0.007 (−0.008, 0.021) .582 0.013 (−0.007, 0.032) .103
50–75 percentile 0.006 (−0.007, 0.019) 0.000 (−0.015, 0.015) 0.023 (0.005, 0.041)
>75 percentile 0.004 (−0.009, 0.016) 0.006 (−0.008, 0.019) 0.010 (−0.006, 0.026)
N 35 716 35 622 31 869
Daily smoking initiation
12-month non-depreciated (vs. < 25 percentile)
25–50 percentile 0.000 (−0.006, 0.005) .936 0.002 (−0.003, 0.007) .793 −0.005 (−0.014, 0.004) .506
50–75 percentile −0.001 (−0.006, 0.003) 0.002 (−0.004, 0.007) 0.002 (−0.008, 0.012)
>75 percentile −0.001 (−0.006, 0.004) −0.001 (−0.006, 0.005) −0.001 (−0.013, 0.011)
N 34 913 33 944 14 535
First cigarette initiation
12-month non-depreciated (vs. <25 percentile)
25–50 percentile 0.004 (−0.004, 0.012) .654 0.001 (−0.009, 0.011) .851 0.012 (−0.006, 0.029) .225
50–75 percentile 0.000 (−0.009, 0.009) −0.001 (−0.010, 0.008) 0.006 (−0.011, 0.024)
>75 percentile 0.003 (−0.005, 0.011) −0.003 (−0.013, 0.008) −0.004 (−0.024, 0.016)
N 31 728 28 931 11 245

AMEs are estimated using single models with Tips media campaign exposure as the independent variable and each outcome. Each model adjusted for sex, race/ethnicity, parents’ highest education, college plans (12th graders only), living arrangement, mother’s current employment, high school program, year, census region, state cigarette price, state unemployment, county poverty, county percent population Hispanic, county percent population black, and county percent college graduates