4.2 Article

Examining Reciprocal Effects of Cigarette Smoking, Food Insecurity, and Psychological Distress in the US

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS
Volume 53, Issue 2, Pages 177-184

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02791072.2020.1845419

Keywords

Cigarette smoking; food insecurity; psychological distress; panel study of income dynamics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HD069609]
  2. National Science Foundation [1157698]
  3. National Institute on Drug Abuse [K01DA043659]

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The study found that cigarette smoking, food insecurity, and psychological distress interact as risk factors in U.S. adults, with bidirectional associations between smoking and food insecurity, food insecurity and psychological distress, but a unidirectional association from psychological distress to smoking. These findings suggest a cyclical pattern where smoking exacerbates food insecurity, food insecurity exacerbates psychological distress, and psychological distress exacerbates smoking.
In the U.S., cigarette smoking is increasingly concentrated in disadvantaged and vulnerable populations, such as populations with lower income and with mental health needs. Food insecurity is linked with psychological distress and is an independent risk factor for smoking. We prospectively examined how cigarette smoking, food insecurity, and psychological distress operate as risk factors for one another in a 2-year longitudinal analysis of U.S. adults from the 2015 and 2017 Panel Study of Income Dynamics, a nationally representative household survey (N = 7946). Using cross-lagged panel analysis, cross-lagged regression coefficients were estimated simultaneously with direct-effect paths, controlling for covariates. Results showed significant bidirectional associations between smoking and food insecurity: 2015 smoking predicted 2017 food insecurity, and 2015 food insecurity predicted 2017 smoking. Food insecurity and psychological distress also had significant bidirectional associations. However, the association between smoking and psychological distress was unidirectional: 2015 psychological distress predicted 2017 smoking, but not vice versa. The findings suggest a cyclical possibility that smoking exacerbates food insecurity, food insecurity exacerbates psychological distress, and psychological distress exacerbates smoking. There is a need to replicate with more timepoints, but our results highlight the importance of examining the overlapping health burdens of smoking, food insecurity, and psychological distress.

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