Aims: To investigate the influence of gender on emerging tobacco use by testing for gender-based measurement invariance of the Adolescents’ Need for Smoking Scale (ANSS) and examining gender differences on each dimension across increasing levels of amount smoked.
Design: Cross sectional survey.
Setting: Thirteen secondary schools located in British Columbia, Canada.
Participants: Data from 1,425 youth who reported smoking at least once in the past month.
Measurements: Survey questions about demographic characteristics, tobacco smoking history, and need for smoking.
Findings: The multidimensional structure of the ANSS is equivalent in boys and girls and the ANSS questions are not gender biased. There were no significant gender differences in the levels of physical dependence across increasing levels of amount smoked. Girls scored higher than boys on levels of emotional dependence across increasing levels of lifetime cigarette exposure. Girls also had higher scores on the social dimension of the ANSS compared to boys among those who smoked 100 or more cigarettes.
Conclusions: Canadian girls score higher than boys on measures of emotional dependence and social attitudes associated with tobacco smoking.