ObjectivePsychiatric, medical, and substance use comorbidities are highly prevalent among smokers, and many of these comorbidities have been found to be associated with reduced rate of success in clinical trials for smoking cessation. While much has been established about the best available treatments from these clinical trials, little is known about the effect of concomitant psychiatric medications on quit rates in smoking cessation programs. On the basis of results in populations with tobacco dependence and other substance use disorders, we hypothesized that smokers taking antidepressants would have a lower rate of quitting in an outpatient smoking cessation program.MethodWe performed a naturalistic chart review of veterans (N = 144) enro...
Background: Tobacco use is a major public health concern, and is associated with a number of mental ...
International audienceThe prevalence of smoking in patients with psychiatric disorders is higher tha...
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) convened a meeting in September 2005 to review tobacc...
Objective: Individuals with substance use and psychiatric disorders have a high prevalence of tobacc...
Background/Aims: Although impressive gains have been made in recent decades in reducing overall rate...
Summary of Key Findings Smoking abstinence at end of program: Intent to treat analysis: 32.2% (...
ObjectivesTobacco use is undertreated in individuals with psychiatric and substance use disorders (S...
Success rate of tobacco dependence treatment among patients with and without a history of depression...
Background: Psychotic disorders (e.g., Schizophrenia, schizoaffetive disorder) are associated with a...
Psychiatric hospitals are increasingly adopting smoke-free policies. Tobacco use is common among per...
People with depression are very often heavy smokers. We wanted to know whether treatments to help pe...
Objective: Accepted treatments for cigarette smoking rarely achieve abstinence rates of >35% at 1...
Introduction: Individuals with concurrent tobacco dependence and other addictions often report sympt...
Individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) endorse high rates of combustible smoking (Zale et al., 2...
Depressed smokers experience greater difficulty in quitting, and patients who report improvement in ...
Background: Tobacco use is a major public health concern, and is associated with a number of mental ...
International audienceThe prevalence of smoking in patients with psychiatric disorders is higher tha...
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) convened a meeting in September 2005 to review tobacc...
Objective: Individuals with substance use and psychiatric disorders have a high prevalence of tobacc...
Background/Aims: Although impressive gains have been made in recent decades in reducing overall rate...
Summary of Key Findings Smoking abstinence at end of program: Intent to treat analysis: 32.2% (...
ObjectivesTobacco use is undertreated in individuals with psychiatric and substance use disorders (S...
Success rate of tobacco dependence treatment among patients with and without a history of depression...
Background: Psychotic disorders (e.g., Schizophrenia, schizoaffetive disorder) are associated with a...
Psychiatric hospitals are increasingly adopting smoke-free policies. Tobacco use is common among per...
People with depression are very often heavy smokers. We wanted to know whether treatments to help pe...
Objective: Accepted treatments for cigarette smoking rarely achieve abstinence rates of >35% at 1...
Introduction: Individuals with concurrent tobacco dependence and other addictions often report sympt...
Individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) endorse high rates of combustible smoking (Zale et al., 2...
Depressed smokers experience greater difficulty in quitting, and patients who report improvement in ...
Background: Tobacco use is a major public health concern, and is associated with a number of mental ...
International audienceThe prevalence of smoking in patients with psychiatric disorders is higher tha...
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) convened a meeting in September 2005 to review tobacc...