Title of article :
Characteristics of Participants Who Stop Smoking and Sustain Abstinence for 1 and 5 Years in the Lung Health Study
Author/Authors :
Robert P. Murray، نويسنده , , Lynn B. Gerald، نويسنده , , Paula G. Lindgren، نويسنده , , John E. Connett، نويسنده , , Cynthia S. Rand، نويسنده , , Nicholas R. Anthonisen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Background. This study describes baseline and Year 1 predictors of abstinence from smoking for the 3523 intervention participants who had complete annual 5-year follow-up data in the Lung Health Study (LHS).
Methods. The LHS enrolled 5887 smokers, aged 35 to 60 years, of whom 3923 were offered a cessation intervention. Of these, 22% achieved biochemically verified abstinence for 5 years. Logistic regressions were performed. The first outcome variable was abstinence from smoking at 1 year. Then for those who were quit at 1 year, the outcome variable was 5 years of sustained abstinence.
Results. All participants who were not using nicotine gum after 1 year in the study were more likely to sustain cessation over 5 years than were gum users at year 1 (OR ranged from 0.31 to 0.44 for four age- and sex-specific groups). Baseline number of previous quit attempts was negatively associated with 5-year quitting success among younger and older men (OR = 0.82 and 0.83). Older participants who were less likely to associate smoking with emotional coping had higher abstinence rates at 5 years of follow-up (OR = 0.89 and 0.84).
Conclusions. Different mechanisms may be responsible for achieving cessation in age/gender groups. These results have implications for planning successful interventions.
Keywords :
smoking cessation , clinical trial , Abstinence , smoking intervention.
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine