Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Centre for Child Health Research, The University of Western Australia, P,O, Box 855, West Perth, WA, 6872, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2013 May 11;13:462. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-462.
High rates of smoking and lower rates of smoking cessation are known to be associated with common mental disorders such as anxiety and depression, and with individual and community measures of socioeconomic status. It is not known to what extent mental illness and socioeconomic status might be jointly associated with smoking behaviour. We set out to examine the relationship between mental illness, measures of socioeconomic disadvantage and both current smoking and smoking cessation rates.
We used data from the 2007 Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing to examine the relationship between mental illness, socioeconomic status and both current smoking and smoking cessation. We used cross-classified tables and logistic regression to examine the relationship between psychosocial and sociodemographic predictors and current smoking. We also used proportional hazards regression to examine the relationship between the factors and smoking cessation.
Both mental illness and socioeconomic status were independently associated with current smoking and with lower likelihood of smoking cessation, with gradients in smoking by mental health status being observed within levels of socioeconomic indicators and vice versa. Having a mental illness in the past 12 months was the most prevalent factor strongly associated with smoking, affecting 20.0% of the population, associated with increased current smoking (OR 2.43; 95% CI: 1.97-3.01) and reduced likelihood of smoking cessation (HR: 0.77; 95% CI: 0.65-0.91).
The association between mental illness and smoking is not explained by the association between mental illness and socioeconomic status. There are strong socioeconomic and psychosocial gradients in both current smoking and smoking cessation. Incorporating knowledge of the other adverse factors in smokers' lives may increase the penetration of tobacco control interventions in population groups that have historically benefitted less from these activities.
已知吸烟率高和戒烟率低与焦虑和抑郁等常见精神障碍以及个体和社区社会经济地位指标有关。目前尚不清楚精神疾病和社会经济地位在多大程度上可能与吸烟行为同时存在。我们着手研究精神疾病、社会经济劣势指标与当前吸烟率和戒烟率之间的关系。
我们使用 2007 年澳大利亚国家心理健康和幸福感调查的数据,研究精神疾病、社会经济地位与当前吸烟和戒烟率之间的关系。我们使用交叉分类表和逻辑回归来检验心理社会和社会人口学预测因素与当前吸烟之间的关系。我们还使用比例风险回归来检验这些因素与戒烟之间的关系。
精神疾病和社会经济地位都与当前吸烟和戒烟可能性降低独立相关,在社会经济指标水平内观察到精神健康状况与吸烟之间的梯度,反之亦然。过去 12 个月内患有精神疾病是与吸烟最密切相关的最普遍因素,影响了 20.0%的人口,与当前吸烟增加(OR 2.43;95%CI:1.97-3.01)和戒烟可能性降低(HR:0.77;95%CI:0.65-0.91)有关。
精神疾病与吸烟之间的关联不能用精神疾病与社会经济地位之间的关联来解释。当前吸烟和戒烟都存在强烈的社会经济和心理社会梯度。在吸烟者的生活中了解其他不利因素可能会增加烟草控制干预措施在历史上受益较少的人群中的普及率。