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Change in anxiety following successful and unsuccessful attempts at smoking cessation: cohort study

Change in anxiety following successful and unsuccessful attempts at smoking cessation: cohort study
Change in anxiety following successful and unsuccessful attempts at smoking cessation: cohort study
BACKGROUND: Despite a lack of empirical evidence, many smokers and health professionals believe that tobacco smoking reduces anxiety, which may deter smoking cessation.

AIMS: The study aim was to assess whether successful smoking cessation or relapse to smoking after a quit attempt are associated with changes in anxiety.

METHOD: A total of 491 smokers attending National Health Service smoking cessation clinics in England were followed up 6 months after enrolment in a trial of pharmacogenetic tailoring of nicotine replacement therapy (ISRCTN14352545).

RESULTS: There was a points difference of 11.8 (95% CI 7.7-16.0) in anxiety score 6 months after cessation between people who relapsed to smoking and people who attained abstinence. This reflected a three-point increase in anxiety from baseline for participants who relapsed and a nine-point decrease for participants who abstained. The increase in anxiety in those who relapsed was largest for those with a current diagnosis of psychiatric disorder and whose main reason for smoking was to cope with stress. The decrease in anxiety on abstinence was larger for these groups also.

CONCLUSIONS: People who achieve abstinence experience a marked reduction in anxiety whereas those who fail to quit experience a modest increase in the long term. These data contradict the assumption that smoking is a stress reliever, but suggest that failure of a quit attempt may generate anxiety.
0007-1250
62-67
McDermott, Máirtín S.
41653e05-6252-4314-ac45-d8eedcdbd973
Marteau, Theresa M.
b0519138-0d20-419c-8bd2-99afb591cc07
Hollands, Gareth J.
24647887-9cd3-4bbc-8046-1c46935e5b37
Hankins, Matthew
ce4b7d68-3320-4af4-9dd7-3537a4b07219
Aveyard, Paul
cb22de2b-29bc-4886-8a00-6e68aea59509
McDermott, Máirtín S.
41653e05-6252-4314-ac45-d8eedcdbd973
Marteau, Theresa M.
b0519138-0d20-419c-8bd2-99afb591cc07
Hollands, Gareth J.
24647887-9cd3-4bbc-8046-1c46935e5b37
Hankins, Matthew
ce4b7d68-3320-4af4-9dd7-3537a4b07219
Aveyard, Paul
cb22de2b-29bc-4886-8a00-6e68aea59509

McDermott, Máirtín S., Marteau, Theresa M., Hollands, Gareth J., Hankins, Matthew and Aveyard, Paul (2013) Change in anxiety following successful and unsuccessful attempts at smoking cessation: cohort study. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 202, 62-67. (doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.112.114389). (PMID:23284151)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite a lack of empirical evidence, many smokers and health professionals believe that tobacco smoking reduces anxiety, which may deter smoking cessation.

AIMS: The study aim was to assess whether successful smoking cessation or relapse to smoking after a quit attempt are associated with changes in anxiety.

METHOD: A total of 491 smokers attending National Health Service smoking cessation clinics in England were followed up 6 months after enrolment in a trial of pharmacogenetic tailoring of nicotine replacement therapy (ISRCTN14352545).

RESULTS: There was a points difference of 11.8 (95% CI 7.7-16.0) in anxiety score 6 months after cessation between people who relapsed to smoking and people who attained abstinence. This reflected a three-point increase in anxiety from baseline for participants who relapsed and a nine-point decrease for participants who abstained. The increase in anxiety in those who relapsed was largest for those with a current diagnosis of psychiatric disorder and whose main reason for smoking was to cope with stress. The decrease in anxiety on abstinence was larger for these groups also.

CONCLUSIONS: People who achieve abstinence experience a marked reduction in anxiety whereas those who fail to quit experience a modest increase in the long term. These data contradict the assumption that smoking is a stress reliever, but suggest that failure of a quit attempt may generate anxiety.

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Published date: January 2013
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 347641
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/347641
ISSN: 0007-1250
PURE UUID: a5d27995-e599-4407-8d86-f66202028b8a

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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2013 16:22
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:50

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Contributors

Author: Máirtín S. McDermott
Author: Theresa M. Marteau
Author: Gareth J. Hollands
Author: Matthew Hankins
Author: Paul Aveyard

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