Sawchuk Craig N, Roy-Byrne Peter, Noonan Carolyn, Bogart Andy, Goldberg Jack, Manson Spero M, Buchwald Dedra
Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN;
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA;
Nicotine Tob Res. 2016 Mar;18(3):259-66. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv071. Epub 2015 Apr 6.
Rates of cigarette smoking are disproportionately high among American Indian populations, although regional differences exist in smoking prevalence. Previous research has noted that anxiety and depression are associated with higher rates of cigarette use. We asked whether lifetime panic disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and major depression were related to lifetime cigarette smoking in two geographically distinct American Indian tribes.
Data were collected in 1997-1999 from 1506 Northern Plains and 1268 Southwest tribal members; data were analyzed in 2009. Regression analyses examined the association between lifetime anxiety and depressive disorders and odds of lifetime smoking status after controlling for sociodemographic variables and alcohol use disorders. Institutional and tribal approvals were obtained for all study procedures, and all participants provided informed consent.
Odds of smoking were two times higher in Southwest participants with panic disorder and major depression, and 1.7 times higher in those with posttraumatic stress disorder, after controlling for sociodemographic variables. After accounting for alcohol use disorders, only major depression remained significantly associated with smoking. In the Northern Plains, psychiatric disorders were not associated with smoking. Increasing psychiatric comorbidity was significantly linked to increased smoking odds in both tribes, especially in the Southwest.
This study is the first to examine the association between psychiatric conditions and lifetime smoking in two large, geographically diverse community samples of American Indians. While the direction of the relationship between nicotine use and psychiatric disorders cannot be determined, understanding unique social, environmental, and cultural differences that contribute to the tobacco-psychiatric disorder relationship may help guide tribe-specific commercial tobacco control strategies.
美国印第安人群中的吸烟率过高,尽管吸烟流行率存在地区差异。先前的研究指出,焦虑和抑郁与较高的吸烟率相关。我们研究了终生惊恐障碍、创伤后应激障碍和重度抑郁是否与两个地理位置不同的美国印第安部落的终生吸烟情况有关。
1997年至1999年收集了1506名北部平原部落成员和1268名西南部部落成员的数据;2009年对数据进行了分析。回归分析在控制了社会人口统计学变量和酒精使用障碍后,检验了终生焦虑和抑郁障碍与终生吸烟状况几率之间的关联。所有研究程序均获得机构和部落的批准,所有参与者均提供了知情同意书。
在控制了社会人口统计学变量后,西南部患有惊恐障碍和重度抑郁的参与者吸烟几率高出两倍,患有创伤后应激障碍的参与者吸烟几率高出1.7倍。在考虑了酒精使用障碍后,只有重度抑郁仍与吸烟显著相关。在北部平原,精神障碍与吸烟无关。精神疾病共病增加与两个部落吸烟几率增加显著相关,尤其是在西南部。
本研究首次在两个地理位置不同的美国印第安大型社区样本中,研究了精神状况与终生吸烟之间的关联。虽然无法确定尼古丁使用与精神障碍之间关系的方向,但了解导致烟草与精神障碍关系的独特社会、环境和文化差异,可能有助于指导针对特定部落的商业烟草控制策略。