• Addiction · Mar 2015

    Associations between use of pharmacological aids in a smoking cessation attempt and subsequent quitting activity: a population study.

    • Stuart G Ferguson, Jamie Brown, Mai Frandsen, and Robert West.
    • School of Medicine, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
    • Addiction. 2015 Mar 1; 110 (3): 513-8.

    Background And AimsModelling the population impact and cost-effectiveness of smoking cessation aids is limited by lack of knowledge about how the use of aids changes across quit attempts. Here we test whether the quit method used in a previous attempt influences (i) future decisions to quit and/or (ii) treatment/s used during subsequent attempts.Design And SettingData came from the Smoking Toolkit Study, a United Kingdom national household survey.Participants And MeasuresSmokers (n = 5489) who completed a baseline and 6-month follow-up questionnaire. Respondents were asked what treatment/s, grouped as: prescription medication/s [bupropion, varenicline or nicotine replacement therapy (NRT)], over-the-counter NRT or unaided that they had used in their most recent quit attempt (at baseline), and any use of treatment/s for a quit attempt in the last 3 months at follow-up.ResultsSmokers who had tried to quit at baseline were more likely to report having tried to quit again prior to follow-up [all odds ratios ≥ 2.19 relative to no attempt at baseline, P < 0.001]. Smokers who tried to quit using pharmacological aids were more likely to try to quit again at follow-up (all ORs ≥ 2.19 relative to no attempt at baseline, P < 0.001). Smokers tended to re-try aids used in baseline attempts in future attempts (all ORs ≥ 1.48 relative to no attempt at baseline, P < 0.01).ConclusionsSmokers who have tried to quit in the past year are more likely to try to quit again within 6 months regardless of whether they used a pharmacological aid, and they are more likely to re-try aids they had used previously.© 2014 Society for the Study of Addiction.

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