Gender, Social & Biological Influences of Smoking and Smoking Cessation Counseling, Part II
Written by: shiela.goldwater.se
Date: Thu, 4 Mar 2010
As was discussed in the first article of this series, teen smoking factors are different between girls and boys. These gender differences continue into adulthood, and only get more complex as smoking cessation counseling researchers have documented.
Stages of Readiness to Change Theory
When teen smokers grow up, they display yet more gender differences. Just as when kids adopt teen smoking, adults differ according to gender in their readiness to change their smoking behavior, that is, in how they approach quitting.
Research has shown that women who are successful at quitting use a greater number of change processes than men. Just because they try and number of different things, doesn't necessarily mean they're always significantly more successful. As with most things in medical science, more research is still needed to better understand these gender differences and what they mean for long-term success rates for both genders.
Nicotine Dependency Treatment for Women
There may be an increased biological sensitivity to nicotine in women who smoke into adulthood. Menstruating women may experience more severe withdrawal symptoms from nicotine during the premenopausal phase of their cycles, suggesting that women may need extra support to be successful during this time. An alternative success factor may be to encourage women to embark on they are cessation programs at other phases of their menstrual cycles. In addition, social support seems to be particularly important for women.
Some circumstances lend themselves to creating a "teachable moment" for women. For example, new mothers may be motivated to make lifestyle change; and physicians can significantly influence older female smokers. Health visits during pregnancy have received particular attention as opportunities for smoking cessation counseling.
Interventions delivered at such times, including in the context of programs targeting multi-ethnic populations attending public health clinics, have been found to be effective in improving cessation rates. Even minimal interventions involving generalizable and relatively inexpensive self-help materials tailored to pregnant women in a single brief session have proved successful.
Ways to assist women in remaining abstinent post partum need to be developed. Some assumptions about circumstances that have not been thought conducive to smoking interventions now need to be reconsidered; for example, the belief that those enrolled in alcohol or other substance abuse programs were not good candidates for smoking cessation has been disconfirmed.
The most exciting recent advance in smoking treatment has been the development of pharmacological adjuncts available by prescription. Gender interactions have surfaced with various medications, despite the fact that most research of pharmaceutical agents are completed on young men. The most widely researched nicotine replacement products are nicotine polacrilex (Nicorette), and the transdermal nicotine patch.
Both have been proven effective when prescribed and used correctly, in the context of a behavioral change program. A nicotine nasal spray that mimics the fast rise-time of plasma nicotine from smoking is soon to be released, followed by the nicotine inhaler, a cigarette-like nicotine product. Other medications have shown varying degrees of success. They include:
* nicotine cholinergic receptor blocade (mecamylamine), antidepressants
* (buspirone and tricyclics), serotonin agonists or precursors
* (d-fenfluramine, fluoxetine, L-tryptophan), sympathomimetics
* (phenylpropanolamine), and several others ( e.g., depot ACTH).
Although the transdermal patch has had a great impact on the treatment of smoking, medications in these other categories may assume more importance in the successful treatment of special populations such as women who cannot use nicotine replacement therapy due to allergic reaction or other contraindications (e.g., pregnant women, recent heart attack or stroke patients), as supplements to treat specific withdrawal symptoms during time-limited portions of the cessation process, or as treatments for psychiatric conditions that might be uncovered by cessation (e.g.,depression).
Although some forms of nicotine replacement have been found to be helpful in controlling post cessation weight gain, particularly in heavy smokers, serotonergic agents (e.g., fluoxetine, d-fenfluramine) are also similalry effective and have the added benefits of treating depression while delaying weight gain. This allows for more effective strategies to be introduced to cope with more general nicotine withdrawal symptoms. While some of these medications alone have not been shown successful for cessation, they could be used successfully in programs tailored specifically to the needs of women.
It is generally accepted that antidepressants & antipsychotics may have gender-specific effects or side effects. Similarly, these and the nicotine replacement medications may have different effects in women. Nicotine gum was found by one researcher to be more effective in men than in women; another researcher found the opposite for clonidine.
Advantages of Worksite Nicotine Treatment
The introduction of nicotine treatment programs at the worksite offers many advantages. The most obvious is the possibility of reaching fifty percent of America's blue-collar workers who smoke and underutilize existing programs. Worksite programs have the potential of directly reaching many of the seventy-five million Americans who are employed. It is not surprising that some researchers consider work sites to be nearly ideal settings for preventative health programs.
The convenience of work sites is unparalleled. Large numbers of people spend much of their waking day at the workplace, ease of information dissemination through pre-established formal and informal communication channels,structural hierarchies that have the potential to enforce restrictions such as no smoking policies, and the probability that such programs can be considered benefits by employees. In addition, many work sites have facilities that can be modified to accommodate numbers of people interested in educational messages.
Worksites offer other advantages not available in the clinic. Since work sites are daily environments, generalization of intervention benefits is likely to occur. A visible work site program can provide a multitude of cues for behavior change and maintenance for that change. Worksite programs that are supported by management, union and/or employee groups can help create attitudinal as well as financial support for health promotion programs that may not otherwise be accessible to employees.
These groups may even provide incentives for positive, health related behavior change. Chesney and Feuerstein also consider the varied composition of the workforce to be a great advantage. Worksite programs have the potential of being accessible to many different groups simultaneously.
The possibility of maximizing long-term work group relationships to create and maintain behavior change is a major factor yet to be thoroughly examined through research. regular contact with co-workers can provide reinforcement through social support, a primary factor in maintenance of change. Another factor which makes such programs appealing to public health educators and psychologists is the relative ease of long-term research due to fairly stable populations. Work-site health promotion is an important component of a community wide approach.
To make a significant public health impact, it is important to identify those interventions most effective in achieving smoking-related behavior change at the work site. Organizational and environmental change warrant as much attention as those directed at promoting individual change. Workplaces,then, offer unparalleled opportunities to learn about and implement programs for human behavior change.
Reported Success of Worksite Programs
Worksite programs making use of behavioral strategies and/or incentives have shown greater changes than less intensive programs, such as screening and educational interventions. In addition, many arguments are surfacing insupport of multiple risk factor approaches, rather than single risk factors, such as smoking or hypertension. Methodological problems are often associated with much worksite research. Many studies have failed to obtain biochemical validation of self-reported smoking status; and most research has quasi-experimental or case study designs.
Cultural and workplace factors supporting smoking abstinence are likely to be influential in generating gender differences. Cultural specificity of some of these factors is suggested by findings that in some cultures cessation rates are higher among women than men. For example, with workplace restrictions on smoking and more men than women in the workforce, it is likely that the response cost of smoking is increasing relatively more for men than for women.
Dr. Marlene M. Maheu, a Licensed Psychologist, is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of one of the largest self-help & psychology portals, SelfhelpMagazine. More articles from this author are available at http://www.selfhelpmagazine.com/. Original article link: http://www.selfhelpmagazine.com/article/smoking-cessation-counseling
About the Author
Dr. Marlene Maheu
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