4.6 Article

Psychosocial factors influencing smoking relapse among youth experiencing homelessness: A qualitative study

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PLOS ONE
卷 17, 期 7, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270665

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资金

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health [5K07CA216321]
  2. Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center
  3. National Cancer Institute (NCI) of the National Institutes of Health [T32CA229114, P30 CA016058]
  4. NCI [K99CA260718]
  5. FDA Center for Tobacco Products [K99CA260718]

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This study reveals the psychosocial factors influencing smoking relapse among youth experiencing homelessness. Stress is identified as a primary driver, while social and environmental opportunities also contribute to relapse. Interventions should focus on addressing stress, improving coping skills, enhancing social support, and reducing nicotine dependence.
ObjectivesIn the United States, up to 70% of youth experiencing homelessness smoke cigarettes. Many are interested in quitting; however, little is known about psychosocial factors influencing smoking relapse in this population. This study, part of a larger project to develop an optimized smoking cessation intervention for youth experiencing homelessness, aimed to describe how psychosocial factors influence smoking relapse in this group. MethodsThis study describes the smoking relapse experiences of 26 youth tobacco users, aged 14-24 years, who were recruited from a homeless drop-in center in Ohio. We conducted semi-structured interviews to understand how stress, opportunity, and coping contribute to smoking relapse. ResultsFive themes emerged from the data: (1) smoking as a lapse in emotional self-regulation in response to stress; (2) smoking as active emotional self-regulation in response to stress; (3) social opportunities facilitate smoking in the context of emotion-focused stress coping; (4) problem-focused stress coping; and (5) opportunity facilitates smoking relapse. ConclusionsStress was a primary driver of smoking relapse among youth experiencing homelessness, yet social and environmental opportunities to smoke also precipitated relapse. Interventions to improve abstinence among this population should target foundational stressors, coping skills, social supports, and nicotine dependence.

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