4.6 Article

Age as a predictor of quit attempts and quit success in smoking cessation: findings from the International Tobacco Control Four-Country survey (2002-14)

Journal

ADDICTION
Volume 116, Issue 9, Pages 2509-2520

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/add.15454

Keywords

Smoking cessation; age; predictors; quitting; tobacco; nicotine

Funding

  1. US National Cancer Institute [R01 CA100362, R01 CA090955, P50 CA111236, P01 CA138389]
  2. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [045734]
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP-57897, MOP-79551, MOP-115016]
  4. Australia Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing
  5. Canadian Tobacco Control Research Initiative [014578]
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [265903, 450110, 1005922]
  7. Cancer Research UK [C312/A3726, C312/A6465, C321/A11039, C25586/A19540]
  8. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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The study found that older smokers were more likely to smoke daily and less likely to attempt and succeed in quitting smoking. Younger smokers were more likely to achieve at least 30 days of abstinence, but the age effect disappeared when controlling for heaviness of smoking. Significant interactions were found between age and intention when predicting quit attempts, and age and heaviness of smoking when predicting quit success.
Background and Aims Past research has found that young smokers are more likely to make quit attempts; however, there are conflicting findings regarding age and quit success. This study examined the degree to which smoker age is related to making quit attempts and quit success. Design Ten waves of the International Tobacco Control Policy Cohort survey (ITC-4C) collected between 2002 and 2014, with nine wave-to-wave transitions with predictors at the first wave predicting quit attempts and success by the next wave. Setting Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia. Participants Data from 15 874 smokers categorized into four age groups at baseline (18-24, 25-39, 40-54 and 55+ years). Measurements Age, quit attempts and success (defined as >= 30 days abstinence confirmed, if possible, on a third wave for recent attempts). Findings Older smokers were more likely to smoke daily (chi(2) = 1557.86, r = 0.136, P < 0.001) than younger smokers. Daily smokers were less likely to report quit attempts (38.1 versus 58.2%) and to achieve 30 days of abstinence (22.9 versus 34.3%) than non-daily smokers. Older daily smokers were less likely to make quit attempts [0.61, confidence interval (CI) = 0.54-0.70, P < 0.001], even after controlling for indicators of nicotine dependence, country, sex, education, income, relationship status and household composition, than younger smokers. Younger smokers (< 25) were more likely to succeed for at least 30 days of abstinence, but only when compared with those aged 40-54 (OR = 0.83, 95% CI = 0.68-0.99). However, when controlling for heaviness of smoking the age effect disappeared. Significant interactions with age were found between age and intention when predicting quit attempts, and age and heaviness of smoking when predicting quit success. Conclusions An international cohort study indicates that young smokers are more likely to attempt to quit and appear to have similar levels of success in abstaining from smoking compared with older smokers when controlling for dependence. Quit success in all ages is most predicted by lower levels of nicotine dependence.

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