TY - JOUR
T1 - The Interaction of Smoking Cessation Norms and Nicotine Dependence on Quit Attempts
T2 - Gender-Stratified Results for Low-Income Smokers in Baltimore, MD
AU - Crossnohere, Norah L.
AU - Davey-Rothwell, Melissa
AU - Latkin, Carl
AU - Tseng, Tuo Yen
AU - Czaplicki, Lauren
AU - Knowlton, Amy
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by FDA and NIH grant support, Award # 5R01DA032217-04S1 and Research reported in this publication was supported by NIDA/NIH and FDA Center for Tobacco Products (CTP). The authors wish to acknowledge and thank participants in this study from Baltimore, MD.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2020/2/3
Y1 - 2020/2/3
N2 - Background: Declines in smoking prevalence among low-income adults lag behind national samples. Understanding the influence of social context factors such as gender, and normative influence on smoking attitudes and behaviors, can inform smoking cessation interventions. Objective: This study explored how gender, smoking dependence, and cessation norms influenced the likelihood of current quit attempts among urban-dwelling, predominately African American adults. Methods: Participants answered questions about their current quit attempts, smoking dependence (heaviness of smoking index [HSI]), and cessation norms (descriptive: having friends who quit smoking; injunctive: friends disapproving of smoking) as a part of a parent study exploring social and environmental factors in tobacco use. Logistic regression stratifying by gender and adjusting for demographics examined main and interaction effects of norms and HSI on odds of having a current quit attempt. Results: Among men, having a higher smoking dependence was associated with a reduced likelihood of trying to quit (AOR = 0.30 [0.15–0.59]), but this effect was moderated by having friends who had quit smoking (AOR = 2.40 [1.20–4.78]). When accounting for the effect of friends quitting smoking, men were not influenced by friends disapproving of smoking. Among women, currently attempting to quit was predicted by neither smoking dependence nor norms. Conclusions/Importance: Cessation norms and smoking dependence influenced the likelihood of quit attempts for men, but not women, in this study. This highlights the importance of conducting gender stratification in smoking cessation research so as to better understand how social and environmental factors differently impact cessation outcomes for men and women.
AB - Background: Declines in smoking prevalence among low-income adults lag behind national samples. Understanding the influence of social context factors such as gender, and normative influence on smoking attitudes and behaviors, can inform smoking cessation interventions. Objective: This study explored how gender, smoking dependence, and cessation norms influenced the likelihood of current quit attempts among urban-dwelling, predominately African American adults. Methods: Participants answered questions about their current quit attempts, smoking dependence (heaviness of smoking index [HSI]), and cessation norms (descriptive: having friends who quit smoking; injunctive: friends disapproving of smoking) as a part of a parent study exploring social and environmental factors in tobacco use. Logistic regression stratifying by gender and adjusting for demographics examined main and interaction effects of norms and HSI on odds of having a current quit attempt. Results: Among men, having a higher smoking dependence was associated with a reduced likelihood of trying to quit (AOR = 0.30 [0.15–0.59]), but this effect was moderated by having friends who had quit smoking (AOR = 2.40 [1.20–4.78]). When accounting for the effect of friends quitting smoking, men were not influenced by friends disapproving of smoking. Among women, currently attempting to quit was predicted by neither smoking dependence nor norms. Conclusions/Importance: Cessation norms and smoking dependence influenced the likelihood of quit attempts for men, but not women, in this study. This highlights the importance of conducting gender stratification in smoking cessation research so as to better understand how social and environmental factors differently impact cessation outcomes for men and women.
KW - African Americans
KW - Smoking cessation
KW - peer influence
KW - social norms
KW - vulnerable populations
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U2 - 10.1080/10826084.2019.1683200
DO - 10.1080/10826084.2019.1683200
M3 - Article
C2 - 31729269
AN - SCOPUS:85075157550
SN - 1082-6084
VL - 55
SP - 424
EP - 428
JO - Substance Use and Misuse
JF - Substance Use and Misuse
IS - 3
ER -