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© 1988 Oxford University Press

research-article

Predicting Abstainers in a Smoking Cessation Programme Administered by General Practitioners

ROBYN L RICHMOND, ANNE AUSTIN and IAN W WEBSTER

School of Community Medicine, University of New South Wales Kensington, Sydney, NSW 2033, Australia

Pre-treatment characteristics which predicted successful outcome in one hundred cigarette smokers participating in a general practitioner administered smoking cessation programme were identified. Successful outcome was assessed using three types of criteria: quit smoking by the end of treatment, remained abstinent for six months and remained abstinent for three years. Seventeen pre-treatment variables predicted immediate response to treatment, but this decreased to six variables for six months sustained abstinence and to only one variable (smoking when III in bed) for three years sustained abstinence. Low cigarette dependence, no smoking related health problems, and a non-smoking social environment characterized subjects most likely to have stopped smoking at the end of treatment and to have remained abstinent for six months.

Revised 1 September 1987


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Am. J. Public HealthHome page
C.-w. Lee and J. Kahende
Factors Associated With Successful Smoking Cessation in the United States, 2000
Am J Public Health, August 1, 2007; 97(8): 1503 - 1509.
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