Disparities in Current Cigarette Smoking among US Adults With Mental Health Conditions.
Thursday, January 19, 2023
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Loretan
CG, Wang TW, Watson CV, Jamal A.
Disparities in Current
Cigarette Smoking among US Adults With Mental Health Conditions.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2022 Dec 22;19:E87. doi: 10.5888/pcd19.220184. PMID:
36548524; PMCID: PMC9809393.
Introduction: Prevalence
of cigarette smoking is disproportionally high among US adults with mental
health conditions. Adults with mental health conditions who smoke cigarettes
are at increased risk for smoking-related illness and death compared with
adults without mental health conditions.
Methods: We
analyzed pooled data from the 2019 and 2020 National Survey on Drug Use and
Health to provide national estimates of current cigarette smoking prevalence
among US adults aged 18 years or older who reported having in the past year any
mental illness, serious mental illness, mild or moderate mental illness,
serious psychological distress, and/or major depressive episode (N = 19,398)
and state-level estimates for any mental illness.
Results: Prevalence
of cigarette smoking for serious mental illness was 27.2%; serious
psychological distress and major depressive disorder, 25.0%; serious
psychological distress, 24.5%; any mental illness, 22.8%; mild or moderate
mental illness, 21.2%; and major depressive disorder, 17.6%. State-level
cigarette smoking prevalence among adults with any mental illness ranged from
11.7% in Utah to 42.1% in Louisiana, with a median of 24.7%.
Conclusion: The
prevalence of current cigarette smoking is higher among adults with any mental
illness, psychological distress, and major depressive disorder than among those
without any mental illness, especially among adults who are non-Hispanic
American Indian or Alaska Native, Hispanic, lesbian, gay, or bisexual and among
those who are experiencing poverty, are uninsured, or have been arrested and
booked in the past year. Continued improvement in integration of smoking
cessation interventions into mental health treatment, equitable implementation
of comprehensive commercial tobacco control policies, and population-specific
approaches could reduce cigarette smoking among adults with mental health
conditions.
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