Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 Sep 4;20(10):1237-1242. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx221.
Studies testing novel tobacco products often provide participants with free product and assess consumption. Some, but not all, studies find that providing free cigarettes increases smoking. We tested changes in smoking when free cigarettes were provided to nondaily, intermittent smokers, who constitute one-third of US adult smokers.
Cigarette consumption was assessed by Time-Line Follow-Back in 235 intermittent smokers for two 2-week periods: when providing their own cigarettes and when provided own-brand cigarettes for free. Smoking topography and carbon monoxide boost were assessed for one cigarette at the end of each period.
Cigarette consumption increased significantly, by 66% (from 1.98 to 3.28 cigarettes per day), when cigarettes were available for free; both the number of days the subjects smoked and the number of cigarettes on those days increased. The increases were significantly greater among African Americans, those Fagerström Tobacco Nicotine Dependence scores >0, those with incomes less than US $25,000 per year, those who engaged in greater conscious restraint of smoking, and for smokers of menthol cigarettes, or "longs." Smoking intensity (smoke volume, by topography) and carbon monoxide boost decreased significantly when cigarettes were provided for free.
Providing intermittent smokers with free cigarettes substantially increased their smoking while decreasing smoking intensity. The increases in smoking varied according to multiple individual and cigarette-type differences. These phenomena may complicate interpretation of studies that compare consumption of a free test product with cigarette consumption or constituent exposure when smokers are providing their own cigarettes. They also suggest that cigarette cost and variations in low-level dependence and in smoking restraint are factors in nondaily smoking.
The study shows that providing nondaily smokers with free cigarettes increases cigarette consumption, but does differentially for different subgroups and cigarette types, while also decreasing smoking intensity. This suggests the value of using free-cigarette baseline data in studies where interventions provide free cigarettes.
测试新型烟草产品的研究通常为参与者提供免费产品并评估其使用情况。一些(但不是全部)研究发现,提供免费香烟会增加吸烟量。我们测试了当免费香烟提供给非每日、间歇性吸烟者时吸烟量的变化,这些人占美国成年吸烟者的三分之一。
通过时间线追踪法,在 235 名间歇性吸烟者中评估了两个为期两周的时间段内的吸烟情况:提供自己的香烟时和提供自己品牌的香烟时。在每个时间段结束时,评估吸烟的吸烟特征和一氧化碳增量。
当免费提供香烟时,吸烟量显著增加了 66%(从每天 1.98 支增加到每天 3.28 支);吸烟天数和吸烟量均有所增加。在非裔美国人、Fagerström 烟草依赖评分>0、年收入低于 25000 美元、有意识地限制吸烟的程度更大、吸食薄荷醇香烟或“长烟”的人群中,增加更为显著。当免费提供香烟时,吸烟强度(通过吸烟特征评估的烟量)和一氧化碳增量显著降低。
为间歇性吸烟者提供免费香烟会显著增加他们的吸烟量,同时降低吸烟强度。吸烟量的增加因多种个体和香烟类型的差异而异。这些现象可能会使比较免费测试产品的消费与吸烟者提供自己香烟时的吸烟量或成分暴露的研究的解释变得复杂。它们还表明,香烟成本以及低度依赖和吸烟限制的变化是非每日吸烟的因素。
该研究表明,为非每日吸烟者提供免费香烟会增加吸烟量,但对不同亚组和香烟类型的影响不同,同时降低吸烟强度。这表明在提供免费香烟的干预措施的研究中,使用免费香烟基线数据的价值。