The Influence of Partner Smoking, Relationship Satisfaction and Parental Stress on Tobacco Use

IF 1.3 Q4 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Journal of Smoking Cessation Pub Date : 2018-12-14 DOI:10.1017/JSC.2018.37
A. Foulstone, T. Kifle, A. Kelly
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Despite declines in tobacco use during pregnancy and after childbirth, smoking remains unacceptably high among many parents. Smoking maintenance or relapse may be common in couple relationships when the other parent continues to smoke, when relationship satisfaction is low, or parental stress high.To examine the longitudinal influence of partner tobacco use, relationship satisfaction and parental stress on tobacco use after childbirth.Data was obtained from 115 Australian heterosexual adult couples (Mean age = 31.8) who reported being pregnant in the previous year and the female partner was a previous or current smoker. A household longitudinal survey was administered in which measures of tobacco use, relationship satisfaction and parental stress were assessed on four occasions over nine years.Overall reductions in tobacco use occurred over the nine-year assessment period, although a small percentage (9.6%) of parents reported being daily smokers at every assessment. Similarly, a small proportion (13.1%) of parents relapsed to using tobacco during the assessment period. A random effects binary logit model indicated that mothers and fathers were more likely to continue or relapse to tobacco use if their partners smoked. Mothers were more likely to quit smoking if they became pregnant between the assessment waves, but for males, having a pregnant partner was not a significant predictor of tobacco cessation.While pregnancy is associated with smoking cessation for mothers, both mothers and fathers are at elevated risk of continued tobacco smoking or relapse if their partner smokes during the first nine years after childbirth. For parents who continue to smoke cigarettes or relapse after childbirth, engagement of the partner in smoking cessation may be a key factor in promoting positive outcomes.
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伴侣吸烟、关系满意度和父母压力对吸烟的影响
尽管怀孕期间和产后吸烟率有所下降,但许多父母的吸烟率仍然高得令人无法接受。在夫妻关系中,当另一方父母继续吸烟、关系满意度低或父母压力大时,吸烟维持或复发可能很常见。研究伴侣吸烟、关系满意度和父母压力对产后吸烟的纵向影响。数据来自115对澳大利亚异性恋成年夫妇(平均年龄=31.8),他们在前一年报告怀孕,并且女性伴侣以前或现在吸烟。进行了一项家庭纵向调查,在九年内四次评估了烟草使用、关系满意度和父母压力。在九年的评估期内,烟草使用量总体上有所减少,尽管在每次评估中都有一小部分(9.6%)的父母报告每天吸烟。同样,在评估期间,一小部分(13.1%)父母再次使用烟草。随机效应二元logit模型表明,如果伴侣吸烟,母亲和父亲更有可能继续或复发吸烟。如果母亲在评估波之间怀孕,她们更有可能戒烟,但对于男性来说,有怀孕的伴侣并不是戒烟的重要预测因素。虽然怀孕与母亲戒烟有关,但如果伴侣在产后前九年吸烟,母亲和父亲继续吸烟或复发的风险都会增加。对于继续吸烟或产后复发的父母来说,伴侣参与戒烟可能是促进积极结果的关键因素。
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来源期刊
Journal of Smoking Cessation
Journal of Smoking Cessation Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
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