Department of Health Policy & Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Department of Prevention and Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia.
Am J Prev Med. 2023 Sep;65(3):485-496. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2023.02.011. Epub 2023 Mar 12.
It is unknown whether and to what extent the duration of smoking abstinence may modify the association between receiving cigarette coupons and smoking relapse in the U.S. This study aims to fill this gap.
Data were from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study Wave 4 (December 2016-January 2018, baseline) and Wave 5 (December 2018-November 2019, follow-up) surveys. Analysis was conducted in May 2022. The study sample was participants who formerly smoked cigarettes at baseline (N=5,186). The exposure was past 12-month receipt of cigarette coupons (yes/no) at baseline, and the outcome was cigarette smoking relapse (yes/no) at follow-up. A potential modifier was the duration of smoking abstinence (within/>1 year) at baseline. Baseline single-wave weights were applied, and a multivariable logistic regression model was used to estimate the adjusted association. Interaction between cigarette coupon receipt and duration of smoking abstinence was examined to explore potential modification effects.
Participants who received cigarette coupons at baseline were more likely to relapse at follow-up (AOR=1.63, 95% CI=1.15, 2.32). This association was significantly stronger among participants who quit within 1 year than among participants who quit >1 year at baseline (AOR for the interaction term=2.77, 95% CI=1.22, 6.25). Subgroup analysis shows that receipt of cigarette coupons was significantly associated with smoking relapse among participants who quit within 1 year (AOR=2.10, 95% CI=1.39, 3.17), and this association was not statistically significant among participants who quit >1 year (AOR=0.76, 95% CI=0.36, 1.63).
Policies restricting cigarette coupons may help adults who recently quit sustain abstinence.
在美国,吸烟戒断时间的长短是否以及在何种程度上影响收到香烟优惠券与吸烟复发之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究旨在填补这一空白。
数据来自于人口烟草评估研究第四波(2016 年 12 月至 2018 年 1 月,基线)和第五波(2018 年 12 月至 2019 年 11 月,随访)调查。分析于 2022 年 5 月进行。研究样本为基线时曾吸烟的参与者(N=5186)。暴露因素为基线时过去 12 个月收到的香烟优惠券(是/否),结局为随访时吸烟复发(是/否)。潜在的修饰因素是基线时吸烟戒断的时间(1 年内/1 年以上)。应用了基线单波权重,并使用多变量逻辑回归模型来估计调整后的关联。检验了香烟优惠券领取与吸烟戒断时间之间的交互作用,以探讨潜在的修饰效应。
基线时收到香烟优惠券的参与者在随访时更有可能复发(AOR=1.63,95%CI=1.15,2.32)。与基线时戒烟 1 年以上的参与者相比,该关联在戒烟 1 年内的参与者中更强(交互项的 AOR=2.77,95%CI=1.22,6.25)。亚组分析表明,在戒烟 1 年内的参与者中,收到香烟优惠券与吸烟复发显著相关(AOR=2.10,95%CI=1.39,3.17),而在戒烟 1 年以上的参与者中,这种关联无统计学意义(AOR=0.76,95%CI=0.36,1.63)。
限制香烟优惠券的政策可能有助于最近戒烟的成年人保持戒烟状态。