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    Home»Health»Yale Research Shows People with a Mental Illness are More Likely to Smoke
    Health

    Yale Research Shows People with a Mental Illness are More Likely to Smoke

    By Bill Hathaway, Yale UniversityApril 16, 20145 Comments3 Mins Read
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    Research Shows People with a Mental Illness are More Likely to Smoke
    A Yale School of Medicine study found that individuals in the United States with a mental illness diagnosis are more likely to smoke heavily and less likely to quit, irrespective of their specific diagnosis.

    New research from Yale University shows that people with a mental illness are much more likely to smoke cigarettes and are less likely to quit smoking than those without mental illness.

    Those in the United States with a mental illness diagnosis are much more likely to smoke cigarettes and smoke more heavily, and are less likely to quit smoking than those without mental illness, regardless of their specific diagnosis, a new study by researchers from the Yale School of Medicine shows.

    They also found variations in smoking rates and likelihood of quitting among different diagnoses of mental illness. The results are reported in the April issue of the journal Tobacco Control.

    Thirty-nine percent of adults with a psychiatric diagnosis smoked compared to 16% without a diagnosis, according to data from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions analyzed by researchers. Two out of every three people with drug use disorder smoke, compared to one out of three with social phobia.

    “We know that smokers with mental illness are more susceptible to smoking-related disease, and those with mental illness die 25 years earlier than adults without mental illness,” said Sherry McKee, associate professor of psychiatry, and senior author on the study. “Effective smoking cessation treatments are available and we know that smokers with mental illness can quit smoking. We need to address why smokers with mental illness are not being treated for their smoking.”

    Over the three-year study period, 22% of smokers with no psychiatric disorders were able to quit smoking, whereas rates of quitting among those with psychiatric disorders illness were 25% lower. Rates of quitting were lowest among those with dysthymia (10%), agoraphobia (13%), and social phobia (13%). “We also found that individuals with multiple diagnoses had the lowest quit rates,” added Philip Smith, lead author on the study.

    This study adds to evidence that smokers with mental illness consume nearly half of all cigarettes in the United States, despite making up a substantially smaller proportion of the population.

    Researchers and policymakers are increasingly calling attention to this important public health issue, and this study helps point to a need for interventions and policies that directly help individuals with mental illness quit smoking.

    Carolyn Mazure of Yale also contributed to the study.

    The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration.

    Reference: “Smoking and mental illness in the US population” by Philip H Smith, Carolyn M Mazure and Sherry A McKee, 12 April 2014, Tobacco Control.
    DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2013-051466

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    Behavioral Science Disease Smoking Yale University
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    5 Comments

    1. Markm on April 16, 2014 9:40 am

      REALLY… WELL THOSE WHO SMOKE ARE TRYING TO KILL THEMSELVES!

      Reply
    2. Jory Ferrell on April 16, 2014 11:41 am

      I believe it. Though there are probably many reasons for this being true.
      For one, people with mental illness are more susceptible to social issues. This could lead to self-confidence crises, and a feeling of not “belonging”. So they try to fit in by doing what their peers are doing: smoking…among other things.
      With lots of people already smoking because they have social issues for a reason besides mental illness, the chances of a mentally ill person running into this folks would be higher…this trait (smoking) will probably decline as more and more people stop smoking (meaning it’s less trendy and loses it’s social value).

      Reply
    3. Richards on April 17, 2014 2:01 am

      Yes, truly said. people suffering from depression are more addicted to it. A great loss of mental and physical health.

      Reply
    4. Madanagopal.V.C. on April 17, 2014 5:54 am

      It should be paradoxical for all smokers to know to that what they start as assuaging mental comfort, by smoking leads to mental illness ultimately. At least the young generation who should be more scientifically oriented in this computer age should understand this bare fact and quit smoking completely. Thank You.

      Reply
    5. mnestheus on April 22, 2014 10:39 am

      YALE RESEARCH SHOWS COMMON SCOLDS ARE MORE LIKELY TO SHOUT

      Reply
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