O'Connor Richard J, Heckman Bryan W, Adkison Sarah E, Rees Vaughan W, Hatsukami Dorothy K, Bickel Warren K, Cummings K Michael
Department of Health Behavior, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina & Hollings Cancer Center, Charleston, SC, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2016 Jun;233(12):2365-71. doi: 10.1007/s00213-016-4286-x. Epub 2016 Apr 6.
The cigarette purchase task (CPT) is a method that can be used to assess the relative value of cigarettes. Based on cigarettes purchased across a price range, five derived metrics (Omax, Pmax, breakpoint, intensity, and elasticity) can assess cigarette demand. A study with adolescent smokers found that these could be reduced to two latent factors: persistence (price insensitivity) and amplitude (volumetric consumption). We sought to replicate this structure with adult smokers and examine how these variables relate to cessation efforts.
Web-based survey conducted in 2014 among adult (18 years and above) current daily cigarette smokers (N = 1194). Participants completed the CPT, Fagerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND), reported past-year quit attempts, and future quit intentions. We included published scales assessing perceived prevalence of smoking, social reactivity, smoker identity, and risk perception.
Our analysis supported two latent variables, persistence and amplitude, which correlated positively with FTND. Persistence was correlated with several psychosocial factors and was higher among those intending to quit very soon, but did not vary by number of past-year quit attempts. Amplitude differed across quit attempts and intention (p < 0.001) and, in multivariable models, was significantly associated with lower 30-day quit intention (OR = 0.76, p = 0.001).
Persistence and amplitude factors characterized CPT data in adults, discriminated known groups (e.g., smokers by intentions to quit), and were positively associated with nicotine dependence. Factor scores also appear to relate to certain psychosocial factors, such as smoker identity and perceptions of risk. Future research should examine the predictive validity of these constructs.
香烟购买任务(CPT)是一种可用于评估香烟相对价值的方法。基于在一系列价格范围内购买的香烟,五个派生指标(Omax、Pmax、断点、强度和弹性)可评估香烟需求。一项针对青少年吸烟者的研究发现,这些指标可归结为两个潜在因素:持续性(价格不敏感性)和幅度(消费量)。我们试图在成年吸烟者中复制这种结构,并研究这些变量与戒烟努力之间的关系。
2014年对成年(18岁及以上)每日吸烟的吸烟者(N = 1194)进行了基于网络的调查。参与者完成了CPT、尼古丁依赖的法格斯特龙测试(FTND),报告了过去一年的戒烟尝试以及未来的戒烟意图。我们纳入了评估吸烟感知流行率、社会反应性、吸烟者身份和风险感知的已发表量表。
我们的分析支持了两个潜在变量,即持续性和幅度,它们与FTND呈正相关。持续性与几个心理社会因素相关,在打算很快戒烟的人群中更高,但不因过去一年的戒烟尝试次数而有所不同。幅度在不同的戒烟尝试和意图之间存在差异(p < 0.001),并且在多变量模型中,与较低的30天戒烟意图显著相关(OR = 0.76,p = 0.001)。
持续性和幅度因素表征了成年吸烟者的CPT数据,区分了已知群体(例如按戒烟意图划分的吸烟者),并与尼古丁依赖呈正相关。因素得分似乎也与某些心理社会因素有关,如吸烟者身份和风险感知。未来的研究应检验这些构念的预测效度。