4.2 Article

Social Smoking Environment and Associations With Cardiac Rehabilitation Attendance

Journal

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HCR.0000000000000518

Keywords

cardiac rehabilitation; enrollment; smoking

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Drug Abuse (NIDA)/Food and Drug Administration (FDA) [U54DA036114]
  2. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R33HL143305]
  3. Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence from the National Institute on General Medical Sciences [P20GM103644]
  4. NIDA Institutional Training Grant [T32DA007242]

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The study found that cardiac patients with more smokers in their social environment were less likely to attend cardiac rehabilitation and had difficulty quitting smoking. Clinicians should consider the impact of smoking within a patient's social network on promoting health behavior change.
Purpose: Continued cigarette smoking after a major cardiac event predicts worse health outcomes and leads to reduced participation in cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Understanding which characteristics of current smokers are associated with CR attendance and smoking cessation will help improve care for these high-risk patients. We examined whether smoking among social connections was associated with CR participation and continued smoking in cardiac patients. Methods: Participants included 149 patients hospitalized with an acute cardiac event who self-reported smoking prior to the hospitalization and were eligible for outpatient CR. Participants completed a survey on their smoking habits prior to hospitalization and 3 mo later. Participants were dichotomized into two groups by the proportion of friends or family currently smoking (None-Few vs Some-Most). Sociodemographic, health, secondhand smoke exposure, and smoking measures were compared using t tests and chi(2) tests (P < .05). ORs were calculated to compare self-reported rates of CR attendance and smoking cessation at 3-mo follow-up. Results: Compared with the None-Few group, participants in the Some-Most group experienced more secondhand smoke exposure (P < .01) and were less likely to attend CR at follow-up (OR = 0.40; 95% CI, 0.17-0.93). Participants in the Some-Most group tended to be less likely to quit smoking, but this difference was not statistically significant. Conclusion: Social environments with more smokers predicted worse outpatient CR attendance. Clinicians should consider smoking within the social network of the patient as an important potential barrier to pro-health behavior change.

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