Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jun 4;16(6):e0252427. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252427. eCollection 2021.
COVID-19 is primarily a respiratory illness, and smoking adversely impacts the respiratory and immune systems; this confluence may therefore incentivize smokers to quit. The present study, conducted in four high-income countries during the first global wave of COVID-19, examined the association between COVID-19 and: (1) thoughts about quitting smoking; (2) changes in smoking (quit attempt, reduced or increased smoking, or no change); and (3) factors related to a positive change (making a quit attempt or reducing smoking) based on an adapted framework of the Health Belief Model.
This cross-sectional study included 6870 adult smokers participating in the Wave 3 (2020) ITC Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey conducted in Australia, Canada, England, and United States (US). These four countries had varying responses to the pandemic by governments and public health, ranging from advising voluntary social distancing to implementing national and subnational staged lockdowns. Considering these varying responses, and the differences in the number of confirmed cases and deaths (greatest in England and the US and lowest in Australia), smoking behaviours related to COVID-19 may have differed between countries. Other factors that may be related to changes in smoking because of COVID-19 were also explored (e.g., sociodemographics, nicotine dependence, perceptions about personal and general risks of smoking on COVID-19). Regression analyses were conducted on weighted data.
Overall, 46.7% of smokers reported thinking about quitting because of COVID-19, which differed by country (p<0.001): England highest (50.9%) and Australia lowest (37.6%). Thinking about quitting smoking because of COVID-19 was more frequent among: females, ethnic minorities, those with financial stress, current vapers, less dependent smokers (non-daily and fewer cigarettes smoked/day), those with greater concern about personal susceptibility of infection, and those who believe COVID-19 is more severe for smokers. Smoking behaviour changes due to COVID-19 were: 1.1% attempted to quit, 14.2% reduced smoking, and 14.6% increased smoking (70.2% reported no change). Positive behaviour change (tried to quit/reduced smoking) was reported by 15.5% of smokers, which differed by country (p = 0.02), where Australia had significantly lower rates than the other three countries. A positive behavioural smoking change was more likely among smokers with: lower dependence, greater concern about personal susceptibility to infection, and believing that COVID-19 is more severe for smokers.
Though nearly half of smokers reported thinking about quitting because of COVID-19, the vast majority did not change their smoking behaviour. Smokers were more likely to try and quit or reduce their smoking if they had greater concern about susceptibility and severity of COVID-19 related to smoking. Smokers in Australia were least likely to reduce or try to quit smoking, which could be related to the significantly lower impact of COVID-19 during the early phase of the pandemic relative to the other countries.
COVID-19 主要是一种呼吸道疾病,而吸烟会对呼吸系统和免疫系统产生不利影响;因此,这种融合可能会促使吸烟者戒烟。本研究在 COVID-19 全球第一波期间在四个高收入国家进行,调查了 COVID-19 与以下方面的关联:(1)戒烟的想法;(2)吸烟行为的变化(戒烟尝试、减少或增加吸烟、或无变化);(3)基于健康信念模型的适应性框架,与积极变化相关的因素(戒烟尝试或减少吸烟)。
这项横断面研究纳入了参加 2020 年 ITC 四国吸烟和蒸气调查(澳大利亚、加拿大、英国和美国)第 3 波(2020 年)的 6870 名成年吸烟者。这四个国家对大流行的政府和公共卫生反应各不相同,从建议自愿保持社交距离到实施全国和次国家分阶段封锁。考虑到这些不同的反应,以及各国确诊病例和死亡人数的差异(英国和美国最大,澳大利亚最低),与 COVID-19 相关的吸烟行为可能因国家而异。还探讨了与 COVID-19 导致吸烟行为变化相关的其他因素(例如,社会人口统计学、尼古丁依赖、对吸烟对 COVID-19 的个人和一般风险的看法)。对加权数据进行回归分析。
总体而言,46.7%的吸烟者表示因 COVID-19 而考虑戒烟,这因国家而异(p<0.001):英国最高(50.9%),澳大利亚最低(37.6%)。因 COVID-19 而考虑戒烟的吸烟者更可能是:女性、少数民族、有经济压力的人、当前电子烟使用者、尼古丁依赖程度较低(非每日吸烟者和每天吸烟较少的人)、对个人感染易感性更关注的人,以及认为 COVID-19 对吸烟者更严重的人。由于 COVID-19 导致的吸烟行为变化为:1.1%尝试戒烟、14.2%减少吸烟和 14.6%增加吸烟(70.2%报告无变化)。15.5%的吸烟者报告了积极的行为改变(尝试戒烟/减少吸烟),这因国家而异(p=0.02),其中澳大利亚的比率明显低于其他三个国家。如果吸烟者尼古丁依赖程度较低、对个人感染易感性的担忧程度较高、并且认为 COVID-19 对吸烟者更严重,则更有可能尝试戒烟或减少吸烟。
尽管近一半的吸烟者表示因 COVID-19 而考虑戒烟,但绝大多数人并未改变其吸烟行为。如果吸烟者对与吸烟相关的 COVID-19 的易感性和严重性更加关注,他们更有可能尝试戒烟或减少吸烟。澳大利亚的吸烟者最不可能减少或尝试戒烟,这可能与 COVID-19 在早期阶段对其他国家的影响明显较低有关。