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Depressed
Smokers less likely to stay Tobacco Free
Newswise, December 7, 2010 — Depressed
smokers want to quit the nicotine habit just
as much as non-depressed smokers, but a new
study suggests that depression can put a
kink in their success.
The study,
which appears online and in the January 2011
edition of the American
Journal of Preventive Medicine, showed that
about 24 percent of surveyed callers to the
California Smokers’ Helpline currently
suffered from major depression and 17
percent of callers had mild depression. Over
half the surveyed callers, depressed or not,
made at least one attempt to quit after
calling the helpline.
At the
two-month mark, however, the success rate of
those with major depression was much lower
than that of mildly depressed or
non-depressed callers.
Nearly one in
five callers with major depression reported
success, but of others, nearly one in three
was able to remain smoke-free.
Most quitlines
do not assess smokers for depression, even
though mild depression already is known to
reduce the success of quitting. This study
suggests that major depression reduces the
success rate even farther.
This is
important because the California quitline
receives a high number of calls from heavy
smokers and smokers on Medicaid; two
circumstances associated with depression.
Since more than 400,000 smokers call U.S.
quitlines every year, the authors believe
that up to 100,000 depressed smokers
nationally are not getting the targeted
treatment they need.
“Assessing for
depression can predict if a smoker will quit
successfully, but the assessment would be
more valuable if it were linked to
services,” said lead study author Kiandra
Hebert, Ph.D., of the University of
California at San Diego.
Hebert said an
integrated health care model is a potential
solution. Depressed smokers could have
better quitting success if they receive
services that address both issues. Quitlines,
which are extremely popular, are in a good
position to offer such services to a large
number of depressed smokers and to pass on
the services they develop to quitlines
across the country.
Treatment
programs, including quitlines, report that a
growing number of callers have other
disorders, such as depression, said Wendy
Bjornson, co-director of the Oregon Health &
Science University Smoking Cessation Center.
“The results of this study are important.
They show the scope of the problem and point
to the need for protocols that can lead to
better outcomes.”