Department of Psychology, University of Houston.
Department of Psychology, Florida State University.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2018 Sep;32(6):660-669. doi: 10.1037/adb0000391.
Scientific evidence suggests women experience more severe problems when attempting to quit smoking relative to men. Yet, little work has examined potential explanatory variables that maintain sex differences in clinically relevant smoking processes. Smoking outcome expectancies have demonstrated sex differences and associative relations with the smoking processes and behavior, including problems when attempting to quit, smoking-specific experiential avoidance, perceived barriers to quitting, and smoking abstinence. Thus, expectancies about the consequences of smoking may explain sex differences across these variables. Accordingly, the current study examined the explanatory role of smoking-outcome expectancies (e.g., long-term negative consequences, immediate negative consequences, sensory satisfaction, negative affect reduction, and appetite weight control) in models of sex differences across cessation-related problems, smoking-specific experiential avoidance, perceived barriers to quitting, and smoking abstinence. Participants included 450 (48.4% female; Mage = 37.45, SD = 13.50) treatment-seeking adult smokers. Results indicated that sex had an indirect effect on problems when attempting to quit smoking through immediate negative consequences and negative affect reduction expectancies; on smoking-specific experiential avoidance through long-term negative consequences, immediate negative consequences, and negative affect reduction expectancies; on barriers to quitting through negative affect reduction expectancies; and on abstinence through appetite weight control expectancies. The current findings suggest that sex differences in negative affect reduction expectancies and negative consequences expectancies may serve to maintain maladaptive smoking processes, whereas appetite weight control expectancies may promote short-term abstinence. These findings provide initial evidence for the conceptual role of smoking expectancies as potential "linking variables" for sex differences in smoking variables. (PsycINFO Database Record
科学证据表明,女性在试图戒烟时比男性面临更严重的问题。然而,很少有研究探讨维持与临床相关吸烟过程中性别差异的潜在解释变量。吸烟后果预期已经表现出性别差异,并与吸烟过程和行为相关联,包括试图戒烟时的问题、吸烟特异性经验回避、戒烟障碍感知和吸烟戒断。因此,对吸烟后果的期望可能解释了这些变量的性别差异。因此,本研究考察了吸烟后果预期(例如长期负面后果、即时负面后果、感官满足、负面情绪减轻和食欲体重控制)在与戒烟相关问题、吸烟特异性经验回避、戒烟障碍感知和吸烟戒断等变量的性别差异模型中的解释作用。参与者包括 450 名(48.4%为女性;Mage=37.45,SD=13.50)寻求治疗的成年吸烟者。结果表明,性别通过即时负面后果和负面情绪减轻预期对试图戒烟时的问题产生间接影响;通过长期负面后果、即时负面后果和负面情绪减轻预期对吸烟特异性经验回避产生间接影响;通过负面情绪减轻预期对戒烟障碍产生间接影响;通过食欲体重控制预期对戒烟产生间接影响。目前的研究结果表明,在负面情绪减轻预期和负面后果预期方面的性别差异可能有助于维持不良的吸烟过程,而食欲体重控制预期可能会促进短期戒烟。这些发现为吸烟预期作为吸烟变量性别差异的潜在“联系变量”的概念作用提供了初步证据。