Do common mental disorders increase cigarette smoking? Results from five waves of a population-based panel cohort study

Citation
K. Ismail et al., Do common mental disorders increase cigarette smoking? Results from five waves of a population-based panel cohort study, AM J EPIDEM, 152(7), 2000, pp. 651-657
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
ISSN journal
00029262 → ACNP
Volume
152
Issue
7
Year of publication
2000
Pages
651 - 657
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9262(20001001)152:7<651:DCMDIC>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
A prospective panel cohort design was used to investigate whether mental di sorders common in the general population increase the likelihood of increas ed cigarette smoking at 12 months follow-up. By 1995, the last year for whi ch data were available, a random sample of 12,057 persons aged 16-75 years residing in private households in Great Britain had been recruited. At each of five annual waves, the main exposure, past mental disorder, was derived from assessments of psychiatric morbidity as measured by the General Healt h Questionnaire-12. Increased cigarette smoking was derived from observatio ns of number of cigarettes smoked and was defined by an increase of five or more per day relative to the previous calendar year. After logistic regres sion analysis, persons with a common mental disorder were about 30% more li kely to have increased their cigarette smoking over the previous year (odds ratio = 1.29, 95% confidence interval: 1.16, 1.43). The estimated effect i n the youngest (16-21 years) and oldest (51-75 years) age groups was higher than that in the middle (31-50 years) age group (odds ratios = 1.50, 1.57, and 1.12, respectively; test for interaction, chi(2) = 6.8 (3 df), p = 0.0 78). These findings indirectly support the hypothesis that common mental di sorders may have an enduring effect of increasing cigarette smoking a year later.