Taylor Gemma, Taylor Amy, Munafò Marcus R, McNeill Ann, Aveyard Paul
Primary Care Clinical Sciences, School of Health & Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies, UK.
UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies, UK MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit (IEU), University of Bristol, Bristol, UK School of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Open. 2015 May 15;5(5):e007812. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-007812.
The association between smoking reduction and mental health is of particular interest given that many smokers report that smoking offers mental health benefits. We aimed to assess the association between smoking reduction and change in mental health using two different analytical approaches to determine if there was any evidence of an association. There were no prior hypotheses.
A secondary analysis of prospective individual level patient data from 5 merged placebo-controlled randomised trials of nicotine replacement therapy for smoking reduction.
All participants were adult smokers, selected because they wanted to reduce but not stop smoking, and had smoked for at least 3 years. Participants were excluded if they were pregnant, breastfeeding, under psychiatric care, deemed to be unfit by a general practitioner, or part of a cessation programme. 2066 participants were enrolled in the trials, 177 participants were biologically validated as prolonged reducers, and 509 as continuing smokers at both 6-week and 18-week follow-ups.
Change in mental health from baseline to an 18-week follow-up was measured using the emotional well-being subscale on the Short Form Health Survey-36.
After adjustment for confounding variables, the differences for reducers compared with continuing smokers were: regression modelling -0.6 (95% CI -4.4 to 3.2) and propensity score matching 1.1 (95% CI -2.0 to 4.1).
Smoking reduction, sustained for at least 12 weeks, was not associated with change in mental health, suggesting that reducing smoking was no better or worse for mental health than continuing smoking. Clinicians offering smoking reduction as a route to quit can be confident that, on average, smoking reduction is not associated with negative change in mental health.
鉴于许多吸烟者称吸烟对心理健康有益,减少吸烟与心理健康之间的关联尤其引人关注。我们旨在采用两种不同的分析方法评估减少吸烟与心理健康变化之间的关联,以确定是否有任何关联的证据。此前并无预先设定的假设。
对5项合并的尼古丁替代疗法减少吸烟的安慰剂对照随机试验的前瞻性个体水平患者数据进行二次分析。
所有参与者均为成年吸烟者,入选原因是他们想减少吸烟量但并非戒烟,且吸烟至少3年。如果参与者怀孕、正在哺乳、接受精神科护理、被全科医生认为不适合或属于戒烟计划的一部分,则被排除。2066名参与者被纳入试验,177名参与者经生物学验证为长期减少吸烟者,509名在6周和18周随访时仍为持续吸烟者。
使用简短健康调查问卷-36的情感幸福感子量表测量从基线到18周随访时的心理健康变化。
在对混杂变量进行调整后,与持续吸烟者相比,减少吸烟者的差异为:回归模型-0.6(95%可信区间-4.4至3.2),倾向得分匹配1.1(95%可信区间-2.0至4.1)。
持续至少12周的减少吸烟与心理健康变化无关,这表明减少吸烟对心理健康的影响并不比持续吸烟更好或更差。提供减少吸烟作为戒烟途径的临床医生可以确信,平均而言,减少吸烟与心理健康的负面变化无关。