• Preventive medicine · Nov 2022

    Review

    A review of research on cigarette smoking in Preventive Medicine in recognition of the journal's 50th anniversary.

    • Tyler G Erath, Kaitlyn O Browning, Carolyn Evemy, Marc Jerome P Feinstein, Rhiannon C Wiley, Elias M Kemperer, Michael DeSarno, and Stephen T Higgins.
    • Vermont Center on Behavior and Health, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States of America; Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States of America. Electronic address: tyler.erath@uvm.edu.
    • Prev Med. 2022 Nov 1; 164: 107335107335.

    AbstractThis report reviews the literature on cigarette smoking published in Preventive Medicine over the past 50 years. The goal is twofold. First, to acknowledge the 50th anniversary of Preventive Medicine and its role in disseminating research on cigarette smoking by providing an abridged summary of smoking research published in the journal from inception through June 23, 2022. Second, to review experimental reports to identify contributions to innovations in tobacco control and regulatory efforts to reduce cigarette smoking. We searched PubMed using the search terms cigarette/cigarettes, tobacco products, smoking, smoking cessation, Preventive Medicine. Titles and abstracts were reviewed in duplicate, excluding reports not addressing cigarette smoking. Included reports were categorized by study type (original study, commentary, review). Experimental articles were assessed for impact using iCite, a National Institutes of Health web application that provides bibliometric information for articles in defined topic areas. The review identified 1181 articles on cigarette smoking: 1018 original studies (86.2%), 107 literature reviews (9.1%), and 56 commentaries (4.7%); 166 of the 1018 original studies (16%) were experimental reports. In the iCite analysis these 166 experimental articles received 6366 total citations, a mean (standard error) citation rate/article of 38.35 (±3.21) and mean relative citation ratio of 1.85 (±0.17) which is at the 73rd percentile for NIH-funded field- and time-normalized reports. Overall, this review demonstrates an ongoing and impactful contribution of Preventive Medicine to efforts to reduce cigarette smoking, the most preventable cause of premature death.Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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