Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Prim Care Community Health. 2022 Jan-Dec;13:21501327211037894. doi: 10.1177/21501327211037894.
Tobacco use remains the leading cause of preventable deaths and is susceptible to social influence. Yet, we know little about the characteristics of primary care social networks and how they influence tobacco use.
To determine what primary care patient social network characteristics are associated with individual smoking behavior.
Cross-sectional.
Two primary care practices in West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (PA), USA.
A random sample of 53 primary care patients and 155 of their nominated social ties.
We examined the association between social network characteristics (degree, communicated weighted social ties, and presence of social reinforcement) and tobacco use history (never smoker, successful quitter, or current smoker). Other covariates included age, race/ethnicity, sex, education, income, and employment status, self-efficacy, depression status, provider-patient relationship.
Of those enrolled in our study (n = 208), 101 identified as never smokers, 59 as successfully quitters, and 48 as current smokers. Social reinforcements from connected alter pairs that never-smoked (OR = 1.20, 95% CI: 1.08, 1.34) was significantly associated with a participant being a never smoker. Participants with stronger ties with successful quitters were significantly more likely to identify as successfully quitting (OR = 1.37, 95% CI: 1.11, 1.69) and conversely had a negative association with stronger ties to unsuccessful quitters (OR = 0.59, 95% CI: 0.44, 0.80) or current smokers who had not tried to quit in the last year (OR = 0.82, 95% CI: 0.68, 0.98). Social reinforcement from connected pairs of alters that were unsuccessful quitters was significantly associated with the participant being a current smoker (OR = 1.26, 95% CI: 1.10, 1.45).
Our study suggests that smoking behaviors do not occur in isolation, nor because of 1 or 2 prominent social network members. Rather, our findings suggest that both strong ties and social reinforcement from clusters of similarly-behaving persons influence smoking behavior. Primary care practices have an opportunity to leverage these insights on patient networks to improve cancer prevention.
吸烟仍然是可预防死亡的主要原因,并且容易受到社会影响。然而,我们对初级保健社交网络的特征以及它们如何影响吸烟知之甚少。
确定初级保健患者社交网络特征与个体吸烟行为之间的关系。
横断面研究。
美国宾夕法尼亚州费城西部的两家初级保健诊所。
随机抽取的 53 名初级保健患者及其 155 名指定社交关系人。
我们检查了社交网络特征(度、交流加权社交关系和社交强化的存在)与吸烟史(从不吸烟者、成功戒烟者或当前吸烟者)之间的关联。其他协变量包括年龄、种族/族裔、性别、教育程度、收入和就业状况、自我效能感、抑郁状况、医患关系。
在我们的研究中(n=208),101 人被确定为从不吸烟者,59 人为成功戒烟者,48 人为当前吸烟者。从不吸烟的相关社交网络成员的社交强化(OR=1.20,95%CI:1.08,1.34)与参与者成为从不吸烟者显著相关。与成功戒烟者联系更紧密的参与者更有可能被认定为成功戒烟(OR=1.37,95%CI:1.11,1.69),而与不成功戒烟者(OR=0.59,95%CI:0.44,0.80)或在过去一年中未尝试戒烟的当前吸烟者(OR=0.82,95%CI:0.68,0.98)的联系更强则呈负相关。来自不成功戒烟者相关社交网络成员的社交强化与参与者成为当前吸烟者显著相关(OR=1.26,95%CI:1.10,1.45)。
我们的研究表明,吸烟行为不是孤立发生的,也不是因为 1 或 2 个突出的社交网络成员。相反,我们的研究结果表明,与具有相似行为的人群的紧密联系和社交强化都会影响吸烟行为。初级保健实践有机会利用这些关于患者网络的见解来改善癌症预防。