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      Las mujeres y el tabaco: características ligadas al género Translated title: Women & cigarette smoking: gender-related aspects

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          Abstract

          El porcentaje de mujeres fumadoras está todavía aumentando en España. Si persisten los patrones actuales de fumar entre las mujeres, el número de muertes continuará creciendo de modo acusado en el próximo siglo. Es posible que en un futuro cercano fumen más mujeres que hombres entre la población adulta española. En esta revisión se actualiza lo que se conoce sobre el impacto que tiene fumar cigarrillos en la salud de las mujeres, los patrones de consumo actuales entre las mismas, los factores especiales que influyen en que fumen y las dificultades que tienen cuando consideran e intentan dejar de fumar. También sugerimos formas en las cuales el consejo mínimo, la terapia de conducta y los productos sustitutivos de la nicotina se pueden incorporar como estrategias de tratamiento adaptadas a las necesidades especiales de las mujeres que fuman.

          Translated abstract

          The percentage of women smokers is still on the rise in Spain. If the current smoking patterns among women continue, the number of deaths will continue rising sharply over the next hundred years. There may be more female smokers than male smokers in the adult population in Spain in the near future. This review provides an update of current knowledge as to the impact cigarette smoking has on women’s health, the current patterns of use among them, the special factors which have a baring on their smoking and the difficulties they have when they are considering the possibility of or trying to quit smoking. We also suggest ways in which a minimum degree of counseling, behavior therapy and nicotine substitute can be incorporated as treatment strategies suited to the special needs of women smokers.

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          Cigarette smoking: implications for psychiatric illness.

          Psychiatry has been essentially uninterested in cigarette smoking and nicotine. However, it is the view of this author that both cigarette smoking and smoking cessation are highly relevant to the clinical psychiatrist in the care of patients and that they are potentially a source of important insights into psychopathology. To support that view, the author reviews the evidence that both major depression and depressive symptoms are associated with a high rate of cigarette smoking and that lifetime history of major depression has an adverse impact on smoking cessation. He also reviews the data available on the influence of cigarette smoking cessation on the course of major depression, the relationship between cigarette smoking and other psychiatric diagnoses, particularly schizophrenia, and the neuropharmacology that might underlie these associations. Finally, the implications of these relationships for psychiatry are discussed.
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            Nicotine dependence, major depression, and anxiety in young adults.

            To determine whether nicotine dependence, classified by level of severity, was associated with other substance dependence, major depression, and anxiety disorders, we studied a random sample of 1007 young adults in the Detroit (Mich) area using the National Institute of Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule, revised according to DSM-III-R. The systematic coverage of DSM-III-R criteria of nicotine dependence provides an unprecedented opportunity to separate persons with nicotine dependence from the larger class of persons with a history of smoking and to examine the prevalence of psychiatric disorders among persons with nicotine dependence and among nondependent smokers. The lifetime prevalence of nicotine dependence was 20%. Nicotine dependence was associated with alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine dependence. Controlling for the effects of other substance dependencies, persons with nicotine dependence had higher rates of major depression and anxiety disorders. The strength of these associations varied by level of severity of nicotine dependence. Nondependent smokers had higher rates of other substance dependencies, but not of major depression or anxiety disorders.
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              Nortriptyline and cognitive-behavioral therapy in the treatment of cigarette smoking.

              A history of major depressive disorder (MDD) predicts failure to quit smoking. We determined the effect of nortriptyline hydrochloride and cognitive-behavioral therapy on smoking treatment outcome in smokers with a history of MDD. The study also addressed the effects of diagnosis and treatment condition on dysphoria after quitting smoking and the effects of dysphoria on abstinence. This was a 2 (nortriptyline vs placebo) x 2 (cognitive-behavioral therapy vs control) x 2 (history of MDD vs no history) randomized trial. The participants were 199 cigarette smokers. The outcome measures were biologically verified abstinence from cigarettes at weeks 12, 24, 38, and 64. Mood, withdrawal, and depression were measured at 3, 5, and 8 days after the smoking quit date. Nortriptyline produced higher abstinence rates than placebo, independent of depression history. Cognitive-behavioral therapy was more effective for participants with a history of depression. Nortriptyline alleviated a negative affect occurring after smoking cessation. Increases in the level of negative affect from baseline to 3 days after the smoking quit date predicted abstinence at later assessments for MDD history-negative smokers. There was also a sex-by-depression history interaction; MDD history-positive women were less likely to be abstinent than MDD history-negative women, but depression history did not predict abstinence for men. Nortriptyline is a promising adjunct for smoking cessation. Smokers with a history of depression are aided by more intensive psychosocial treatments. Mood and diagnosis interact to predict relapse. Increases in negative affect after quitting smoking are attenuated by nortriptyline.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                resp
                Revista Española de Salud Pública
                Rev. Esp. Salud Publica
                Ministerio de Sanidad (Madrid, Madrid, Spain )
                1135-5727
                2173-9110
                February 2000
                : 74
                : 1
                Article
                S1135-57272000000100003 S1135-5727(00)07400103
                10.1590/s1135-57272000000100003
                f6af839f-850f-4e6e-b60c-dc611c706e51

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 International License.

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                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 91, Pages: 0
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                SciELO Spain

                Self URI: Texto completo solamente en formato PDF (ES)
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                Colaboración Especial

                Cigarette smoking,Health and women,del tabaco,Abandono,Salud y mujer,Tabaco,Smoking cessation

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