4.1 Article

An Ecological Momentary Assessment Analysis of Prequit Markers for Smoking-Cessation Failure

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 6, Pages 479-488

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0029725

Keywords

craving; ecological momentary assessment; smoking cessation

Funding

  1. Transdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Center from the United States Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Cancer Institute [P50CA084724]
  2. NIH, National Institute of Drug Abuse [P50DA19706, RC1DA028129]
  3. GlaxoSmithKline
  4. Nabi Biopharmaceuticals
  5. Pfizer
  6. Sanofi-Synthelabo

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This study aimed to identify correlates of smoking-cessation failure, a failure to establish abstinence during a quit-smoking attempt. Identifying risk factors for early failure could facilitate the development of tailored interventions to promote cessation. The current study used existing ecological momentary assessment (EMA) data to investigate the extent to which prequit craving, negative affect, and recent smoking were associated with cessation failure in 374 smokers (189, 50.5% female). Subjects were prompted to complete 4-7 real-time reports of craving, negative affect, and recent smoking daily in the four days prior to quitting. Multilevel models of craving and negative affect (mean level, growth, volatility, and association with smoking) were estimated. Results indicated that recent smoking was associated with significantly lower craving among smokers who failed to quit than those who achieved a full day of cessation, but this held only among smokers who reduced smoking by at least 10% in the days preceding the quit attempt. Smokers who failed to quit on the quit day also experienced slower increases in negative affect in the days preceding the quit attempt than did initial abstainers, but delayed quitters and delayed cessation failures did not differ in negative-affect trajectories. These results suggest that successful abstainers and cessation failures can be differentiated by specific dimensions of prequit craving and negative-affect experiences, but the effects hold only in certain circumstances.

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