Friedman Abigail S
Department of Health Policy and Management, Yale School of Public Health, 60 College Street, Rm. 303, New Haven, CT, 06520-8034, United States.
J Health Econ. 2020 Jul;72:102323. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2020.102323. Epub 2020 May 4.
Individuals with mental health problems smoke at far higher rates than their peers, and have done for decades. This paper explores a potential explanation: smoking as a means to cope with distress. The proposed "coping response" framework is assessed by analyzing how adolescents respond to two events known to trigger acute mental distress: violent crime victimization and death of a non-family member the respondent felt close to. Consistent with a coping response, these shocks yield statistically significant increases in first cigarette use, recent smoking, and daily smoking, with greater initiation responses among those who are depressed at baseline, and dampened responsiveness among those facing higher cigarette taxes. Back-of-the-envelope estimates suggest that differential responsiveness to adverse events by baseline depression explains 5% of first cigarette use in this sample, and almost a third of the gap in adolescent smoking initiation between those in the highest and lowest terciles of depression scores.
有心理健康问题的人吸烟率远远高于同龄人,而且几十年来一直如此。本文探讨了一种可能的解释:吸烟作为应对痛苦的一种方式。通过分析青少年如何应对已知会引发急性精神痛苦的两件事来评估所提出的“应对反应”框架:暴力犯罪受害以及受访者感到亲近的非家庭成员死亡。与应对反应一致,这些冲击导致首次吸烟、近期吸烟和每日吸烟在统计上显著增加,基线时抑郁的人有更大的开始吸烟反应,而面临更高香烟税的人反应则有所减弱。粗略估计表明,基线抑郁对不良事件的不同反应解释了该样本中5%的首次吸烟情况,以及抑郁得分最高和最低三分位数人群之间青少年吸烟开始率差距的近三分之一。