Sánchez-Johnsen Lisa A P, Spring Bonnie J, Sommerfeld Beth Kaplan, Fitzgibbon Marian L
University of Hawai'i Cancer Research Center of Hawaii, 1960 East-West Road, Biomedical Sciences Building, C-105, Honolulu 96822, Hawaii, USA.
Addict Behav. 2005 Mar;30(3):601-5. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2004.07.007.
We examined whether the weight concerns of Blacks and Whites who enroll in smoking-cessation treatment differed from women who declined treatment. Black (n=100) and White (n=100) female smokers completed four measures of weight concern. Whites reported more general weight concern and smoking-specific weight concern than Blacks did. Treatment enrollers reported more general and smoking-specific weight concerns than decliners did. After controlling for BMI, SES, and number of cigarettes, ethnicity accounted for significant variance in general and smoking-specific weight concerns. Overall, Blacks reported less weight concerns than the Whites did, but when Blacks enrolled in treatment, these differences were less apparent.