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Corrigendum to 'Examining the effects of stress and psychological distress on smoking abstinence in cancer patients' [Prev. Med. Rep. 23 (2021) 101402]

Authors :
Joanna M. Streck
Christina M. Luberto
Alona Muzikansky
Sarah Skurla
Colin J. Ponzani
Giselle K. Perez
Daniel L. Hall
Adam Gonzalez
Brittain Mahaffey
Nancy A. Rigotti
Jamie S. Ostroff
Elyse R. Park
Source :
Preventive Medicine Reports, Vol 25, Iss, Pp 101693-(2022), Preventive Medicine Reports
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Cancer patients who smoke report more stress and psychological distress than patients who do not smoke. It is unclear how these emotional symptoms may modify smoking behavior in cancer patients. We examined the influence of a smoking cessation intervention for cancer patients on stress and distress, and the effects of these symptoms on smoking abstinence.Mixed-methods secondary analysis of data from the Smokefree Support Study, a two-site randomized controlled trial examining the efficacy of Intensive (IT; n = 153) vs. Standard Treatment (ST; n = 150) for smoking cessation in newly diagnosed cancer patients. Stress coping, perceived stress, distress, and anxiety were self-reported at baseline, 3, and 6 months. Abstinence was biochemically-confirmed at 6 months. A subset of patients (n = 72) completed qualitative exit-interviews.Patients were on average, 58 years old, 56% female, and smoked a median of 10 cigarettes/day. There were no significant treatment group × time interactions or main effects of treatment group on stress or distress measures (p's 0.05), however there were significant main effects of time suggesting symptom improvements on each measure in both study groups (p's 0.05). In adjusted logistic regression models, lower levels anxiety at 3 months predicted confirmed smoking abstinence at 6 months (p = .03). Qualitatively, at 6 months, patients reported their stress and smoking were connected and that the cessation counseling was helpful.Cancer patients enrolled in a smoking cessation trial report decreases in stress, distress and anxiety over time, and anxiety symptoms may impact smoking cessation success at follow-up resulting in an important intervention target.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22113355
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Preventive Medicine Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9268847b4a669a15fe019bc93823c665