School of Public Health, University of Memphis, 201 Robison Hall, Memphis, TN, United States.
School of Public Health, University of Memphis, 201 Robison Hall, Memphis, TN, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 Feb 1;195:178-185. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2018.09.025. Epub 2018 Nov 16.
Smoking relapse is rarely examined in disaster research. Thus, this study investigated smoking relapse nine and eighteen months after Hurricane Katrina and identified pathways and conditions for this outcome.
The data came from a prospective study of adult ever smokers who were living in New Orleans at the time Hurricane Katrina struck (n = 1003), and a comparison sample of Memphis residents (n = 1001) who were not directly impacted by the hurricane. Participants from both cities were recruited using random digit dialing and were surveyed nine and eighteen months after Hurricane Katrina. We assessed whether smoking relapse rates differed by city and evaluated potential mediators and moderators of this association using conditional process analysis.
Though the probabilities of smoking relapse, posttraumatic stress, and depressive symptoms were higher among New Orleans than Memphis participants, hurricane exposure did not indirectly affect smoking relapse through increases in posttraumatic stress and depressive symptoms. Instead, as the number of hurricane-related events increased so to did the probability of smoking relapse through increases in depressive (β = 0.08, SE = 0.03, p = .02) and posttraumatic stress symptoms (β=0.08, SE=0.04, p = .04). Social support lowered the probability of smoking relapse by protecting against increases in depressive and posttraumatic stress symptoms.
Posttraumatic stress and depressive symptoms mediated the effects of disaster exposure on smoking relapse, and this effect was most pronounced among survivors who reported disaster-related stressors. Former smokers heavily exposed to disasters may benefit from postdisaster interventions that reduce depressive and posttraumatic stress symptoms, which may prevent smoking relapse.
在灾难研究中,很少有研究关注吸烟复吸。因此,本研究调查了卡特里娜飓风过后 9 个月和 18 个月的吸烟复吸情况,并确定了导致这种结果的途径和条件。
该数据来自一项针对成年曾吸烟者的前瞻性研究,这些吸烟者在卡特里娜飓风袭击时居住在新奥尔良(n=1003),并与孟菲斯居民(n=1001)进行了比较,这些居民没有受到飓风的直接影响。来自这两个城市的参与者都是通过随机数字拨号招募的,并在卡特里娜飓风过后 9 个月和 18 个月进行了调查。我们评估了吸烟复吸率是否因城市而异,并使用条件过程分析评估了这种关联的潜在中介和调节因素。
尽管新奥尔良参与者的吸烟复吸率、创伤后应激和抑郁症状的概率高于孟菲斯参与者,但飓风暴露并没有通过增加创伤后应激和抑郁症状间接影响吸烟复吸。相反,随着与飓风相关事件的增加,抑郁(β=0.08,SE=0.03,p=0.02)和创伤后应激症状(β=0.08,SE=0.04,p=0.04)的增加也会增加吸烟复吸的概率。社会支持通过保护抑郁和创伤后应激症状的增加来降低吸烟复吸的概率。
创伤后应激和抑郁症状中介了灾难暴露对吸烟复吸的影响,而这种影响在报告与灾难相关压力源的幸存者中最为明显。遭受严重灾难的前吸烟者可能受益于减少抑郁和创伤后应激症状的灾后干预,这可能预防吸烟复吸。