| IN
THE NEWS
For your information!
Alcohol
Problems Hinder Smoking Cessation
Contact:J. Taylor Hays, MD
(507) 284-4921
hays.taylor@mayo.edu
People with current or past alcohol problems have
more trouble quitting smoking and are more dependent on nicotine
than people who have never had alcohol problems, new research shows.
"Many recovering alcoholics rely on nicotine
to help them avoid relapse to alcohol," said J. Taylor Hays,
MD, the lead investigator of the study. "It is important to
recognize that this group is more likely to die from smoking-related
diseases than from alcohol-related conditions. Therefore, it seems
prudent to address both alcohol and nicotine dependence."
Scientists from the Mayo Clinic/Mayo Foundation
and the University of Wisconsin compared the quit rates of 382 smoking
cessation program participants. All of the subjects were at least
20 years old and had smoked 15 or more cigarettes daily for at least
one year. The results of the study appear in the current issue (Vol.
21, No. 3) of Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
The participants with current or past alcohol problems
were much less likely to have quit smoking after intervals of four
and eight weeks of participating in the smoking cessation program.
The program included nicotine patch therapy and one of three types
of counseling: self-help materials, physician intervention and individual
counseling, or group therapy.
Six months after the program began, the differences
were less marked. However, people in both of the alcohol-problem
groups remained less likely to abstain from smoking, and they smoked
more cigarettes per day than did those without alcohol problems.
Notably, the smokers with past alcohol problems
had more difficulty quitting and smoked more cigarettes than did
those with active or no alcohol problems.
The research team also speculates that major depression,
which is common in both alcoholics and smokers, may deter people
with alcohol problems from quitting smoking.
###
Annals of Behavioral Medicine is the official
peer-reviewed publication of The Society of Behavioral Medicine.
For information about the journal, contact Arthur Stone, PhD, 516-632-8833.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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