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Depression and the dynamics of smoking
A national perspective
R. F. Anda, D. F. Williamson, L. G. Escobedo, E. E. Mast, G.
A. Giovino and P. L. Remington
Office of Surveillance and Analysis, Centers for Disease Control,
Atlanta, GA 30333.
Data from multiple studies suggest that depression plays a role
in cigarette smoking. To obtain a national perspective on the
role of depression in the dynamics
of smoking, we analyzed data
from the first National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey Epidemiologic
Follow-up Study. We used the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression Scale to assess symptoms of depression and used the
standard cutoff (score, greater than or equal to 16) for defining
persons as depressed.
The cross-sectional analysis of the first
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey showed that
the prevalence of current smokers increased as the Center for
Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score increased, whereas
the quit ratio (former smokers/ever smokers) decreased as the
Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score increased.
Among the cohort of smokers in the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey Epidemiologic Follow-up Study, the estimated
incidence of quitting after 9 years of follow-up was 9.9% for
depressed smokers and 17.7% for nondepressed smokers. When we
adjusted for amount smoked, sex, age, and educational attainment
by means of a Cox proportional hazards model, we found that depressed
smokers were 40% less likely to have quit compared with nondepressed
smokers (relative risk, 0.6). These findings suggest that depression
plays an important role in the dynamics
of cigarette smoking in the United States.

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