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Auteur Michael Chaiton |
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Estimating the number of quit attempts it takes to quit smoking successfully in a longitudinal cohort of smokers / Michael Chaiton (2016)
Titre : Estimating the number of quit attempts it takes to quit smoking successfully in a longitudinal cohort of smokers Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Michael Chaiton, Auteur ; Lori M. Diemert, Auteur ; Joanna E Cohen, Auteur Editeur : BMJ Publishing Group Année de publication : 2016 Collection : BMJ Open, ISSN 2044-6055 num. 6 Importance : 10 p. Présentation : graph., tab. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [DIVERS] géographie:Amérique:Amérique du Nord:Canada
[TABAC] étude
[TABAC] sevrage tabagique
[TABAC] sevrage tabagique:efficacité du sevrage:rechuteIndex. décimale : TA 6.5 Rechutes Résumé : Objectives:
The number of quit attempts it takes a smoker to quit successfully is a commonly reported figure among smoking cessation programmes, but previous estimates have been based on lifetime recall in cross-sectional samples of successful quitters only. The purpose of this study is to improve the estimate of number of quit attempts prior to quitting successfully.
Design:
We used data from 1277 participants who had made an attempt to quit smoking in the Ontario Tobacco Survey, a longitudinal survey of smokers followed every 6 months for up to 3 years beginning in 2005. We calculated the number of quit attempts prior to quitting successfully under four different sets of assumptions. Our expected best set of assumptions incorporated a life table approach accounting for the declining success rates for subsequent observed quit attempts in the cohort.
Results:
The estimated average number of quit attempts expected before quitting successfully ranged from 6.1 under the assumptions consistent with prior research, 19.6 using a constant rate approach, 29.6 using the method with the expected lowest bias, to 142 using an approach including previous recall history.
Conclusions: Previous estimates of number of quit attempts required to quit may be underestimating the average number of attempts as these estimates excluded smokers who have greater difficulty quitting and relied on lifetime recall of number of attempts. Understanding that for many smokers it may take 30 or more quit attempts before being successful may assist with clinical expectations.En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011045 Format de la ressource électronique : Page de l'éditeur Permalink : https://biblio.fares.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=9571 Aucun avis, veuillez vous identifier pour ajouter le vôtre !