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Article

A cross sectional survey of smoking characteristics and quitting behaviour from a sample of homeless adults in Great Britain

Details

Citation

Dawkins L, Ford A, Bauld L, Balaban S, Tyler A & Cox S (2019) A cross sectional survey of smoking characteristics and quitting behaviour from a sample of homeless adults in Great Britain. Addictive Behaviors, 95, pp. 35-40. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.02.020

Abstract
Background Smoking is a key contributor to health and social inequalities and homeless smoking prevalence rates are 4 times higher than the general population. Research on homelessness and smoking to date has been concentrated predominantly in the US and Australia. This study aimed to describe smoking and quitting behaviour in homeless adult smokers in Great Britain. Data on perceptions of, and willingness to try, e-cigarettes were also gathered. Methods Cross sectional survey of 283 adult smokers accessing homeless support services in Kent, the Midlands, London and Edinburgh. Participants answered a four-part survey: i) demographics; ii) current smoking behaviour and dependence (including the Fagerstr?m Test of Cigarette Dependence [FTCD]); iii) previous quit attempts; and iv) e-cigarettes perceptions. Results High levels of cigarette dependence were observed (FTCD: M?=?7.78, sd?±?0.98). Although desire to quit was high, most had made fewer than 5 quit attempts and 90% of these lasted less than 24?h. 91.5% reported that others around them also smoked. Previous quit methods used included cold turkey (29.7%), NRT (24.7%), varenicline (22.3%) and bupropion (14.5%). 34% were willing or able to spend ?20 or more for an e-cigarette and 82% had tried one in the past although 54% reported that they preferred smoking. Conclusion We observed high nicotine dependence, few long-term quit attempts, strong desire to quit and amenability to both traditional cessation methods and e-cigarettes. Community embedded and non-routine approaches to cessation may be promising avenues promoting engagement with the homeless community. Likely barriers to uptake include low affordability, preference for cigarettes and high numbers of smoking acquaintances.

Keywords
Toxicology; Medicine (miscellaneous); Clinical Psychology; Psychiatry and Mental health

Journal
Addictive Behaviors: Volume 95

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/08/2019
Publication date online22/02/2019
Date accepted by journal21/02/2019
URL
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0306-4603

People (1)

Dr Allison Ford

Dr Allison Ford

Associate Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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