Centre for Values, Ethics and Law in Medicine (VELiM), Sydney School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2017 Nov 7;19(12):1408-1417. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw216.
Tobacco use among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people is double the general population. Limited evidence suggests high smoking rates among intersex people. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) people are a priority population in Australian health policy, particularly mental health and aging. Despite associations between smoking and noncommunicable diseases relevant to aging and mental health, LGBTI-targeted smoking cessation interventions in Australia have been limited to people living with HIV. Applying existing interventions to marginalized populations without modification and evaluation may fail and exacerbate inequities.
To assess outcomes and characterize the populations served, cultural modifications, and behavior change techniques (BCTs) of interventions to reduce LGBTI smoking.
We searched MEDLINE, six additional databases, and contacted authors to retrieve published and unpublished program evaluations.
We retrieved 19 studies (3663 participants). None used control groups. Overall quit rate was 61.0% at the end of interventions and stabilized at 38.6% at 3-6 months. All studies included gay men, 13 included lesbians, 13 "LGBT," 12 bisexual people, five transgender people, and none included intersex people. Transgender people comprised 3% of participants. Of programs open to women, 27.8% of participants were women. Cultural modifications were used by 17 (89.5%) studies, commonly meeting in LGBT spaces, discussing social justice, and discussing LGBT-specific triggers. Common BCTs included providing normative information, boosting motivation/self-efficacy, relapse prevention, social support, action planning, and discussing consequences.
Quit rates were high; using control groups would improve evaluation. Existing programs may fail to reach groups other than gay men.
This review examines the evidence for LGBTI-targeted smoking cessation interventions. Populations within LGBTI are not proportionally represented in smoking cessation research, and no study addressed intersex smoking. Overall, LGBT-targeted interventions appear to be effective, and simply having an LGBT-specific group may be more effective than groups for the general population. More rigorous research is necessary to draw firm conclusions. Our study space analysis provides suggestions for areas of more targeted research on mechanisms underlying these complex interventions' success.
女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和跨性别者(LGBT)人群中的烟草使用量是普通人群的两倍。有限的证据表明,间性人吸烟率很高。女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别和间性人(LGBTI)是澳大利亚卫生政策的重点人群,尤其是在心理健康和老龄化方面。尽管吸烟与与老龄化和心理健康相关的非传染性疾病之间存在关联,但澳大利亚针对 LGBTI 的戒烟干预措施仅限于艾滋病毒感染者。如果不进行修改和评估,将现有的干预措施应用于边缘化人群可能会失败,并加剧不平等。
评估减少 LGBTI 吸烟的干预措施的结果,并描述所服务的人群、文化调整和行为改变技术(BCT)。
我们检索了 MEDLINE、另外六个数据库,并联系了作者以检索已发表和未发表的方案评估。
我们检索到 19 项研究(3663 名参与者)。没有一项研究使用对照组。干预结束时的总体戒烟率为 61.0%,在 3-6 个月时稳定在 38.6%。所有研究均包括男同性恋者,13 项研究包括女同性恋者,13 项研究包括“LGBT”,12 项研究包括双性恋者,5 项研究包括跨性别者,没有一项研究包括间性人。跨性别者占参与者的 3%。在对女性开放的项目中,27.8%的参与者为女性。17 项(89.5%)研究进行了文化调整,通常在 LGBT 场所进行,讨论社会正义问题,并讨论 LGBT 特定的触发因素。常见的 BCT 包括提供规范信息、提高动机/自我效能、防止复发、社会支持、行动计划和讨论后果。
戒烟率很高;使用对照组将提高评估效果。现有的项目可能无法覆盖除男同性恋者以外的其他群体。
本综述检查了针对 LGBTI 的戒烟干预措施的证据。LGBTI 人群中没有按比例代表在戒烟研究中,没有研究涉及间性人吸烟。总体而言,针对 LGBT 的干预措施似乎是有效的,而且仅仅有一个针对 LGBT 的团体可能比针对普通人群的团体更有效。需要更严格的研究来得出更确凿的结论。我们的研究空间分析为针对这些复杂干预措施成功背后机制的更有针对性的研究领域提供了建议。