Continuation of Smoking Cessation and Following Weight Change after Intervention in a Healthy Population with High Smoking Prevalence
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Smoking prevalence among males is conspicuously high in Asian countries including Japan. There are few prospective intervention studies on the duration of smoking cessation within regions with a high prevalence of smokers, such as Asia. We investigated the extent to which subjects continued abstaining from smoking after receiving smoking cessation support provided for all smokers in an occupational setting, regardless of their willingness to quit smoking. The subjects were 251 male workers who were smokers and had received a smoking cessation intervention in 1997 in an occupational setting. Smoking cessation rates and body mass index (BMl) at 10, 18, 30, 42, 54, and 66 months after the initial intervention were confirmed during annual health check-ups. Those who quit smoking following the intervention and continuously abstained from smoking throughout the study period were separately examined for BMl. After five years, 10.6% of the smokers continued smoking cessation. Of the abstainers who quit following the intervention, the abstinence rate decreased in the first and second year, but it stabilized at approximately 45% after the third year. High nicotine dependence and a self-reported lack of willingness to quit smoking did not lower long-term abstinence rates. Abstainers initially gained 1.55 BMl on average, but decreased the weight gain to 0.96 BMl over six years. Introducing smoking cessation support without nicotine replacement therapy is an effective long-term strategy in a healthy population with a high smoking prevalence. Abstainers maintain their smoking cessation if they refrain from smoking for three years.
- 社団法人日本産業衛生学会の論文
著者
-
UESHIMA Hirotsugu
Shiga University of Medical Science
-
Hayakawa Takehito
Department of Hygiene and Preventive Medicine, Fukushima Medical University
-
Kadowaki Takashi
滋賀大学 医学部健康科学科
-
Katanosaka Yuki
国立循環器病センター
-
Kita Yoshikuni
Shiga University of Medical Science
-
Okayama Akira
National Cardiovascular Center
-
Okayama A
The First Institute Of Health Service Japan Anti-tuberculosis Association
-
Okayama Akira
Department Of Orthopedic Surgery Hyogo College Of Medicine
-
Takagi Kenzo
Third Division Of The Research Laboratory For Development Of Medicine School Of Pharmacy Hokuriku Un
-
Miyamatsu Naomi
Shiga University Of Medical Science
-
Hayakawa Takehito
Department Of Hygiene And Preventive Medicine Fukushima Medical University
-
Okamura Tomonori
Shiga University of Medical Science
-
Kadowaki Takashi
Shiga University of Medical Science
-
Hayakawa Takehito
Shimane University School of Medicine
-
WATANABE Makoto
Jichi Medical School
-
HISHIDA Kayoko
Shiga University of Medical Science
-
Hishida K
Shiga University Of Medical Science
-
Watanabe Makoto
Department Of Preventive Cardiology National Cardiovascular Center
-
Watanabe Makoto
Division Of Epidemiology And Prevention Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute
-
Hayakawa Takehito
Division Of Epidemiology And Prevention Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute
関連論文
- Marital Status and Cardiovascular Risk Factors among Middle-aged Japanese Male Workers : The High-risk and Population Strategy for Occupational Health Promotion (HIPOP-OHP) Study
- The Japanese Society of Hypertension Committee for Guidelines for the Management of Hypertension
- Comparison of the National Nutritional Survey in Japan Estimated Individual-Based Nutritional Data and NIPPON DATA80 Food Frequency Questionnaires
- Fatty Acids Intakes and Serum Lipid Profiles: NIPPON DATA90 and the National Nutrition Monitoring
- Effect of chronic kidney disease on individual and population medical expenditures in the Japanese population
- PE-410 Associations of CRP and Fibrinogen with Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Whites in US, Japanese-American in Hawaii and Japanese in Japan : ERA-JUMP Study(PE069,Preventive Medicine/Epidemiology/Education 2 (H),Poster Session (English),The 73rd Annual
- Reproducibility of Nocturnal Blood Pressure Assessed by Self-Measurement of Blood Pressure at Home
- Soy consumption reduces the risk of non-small-cell lung cancers with epidermal growth factor receptor mutations among Japanese
- Meat, milk, saturated fatty acids, the Pro12Ala and C161T polymorphisms of the PPARγ gene and colorectal cancer risk in Japanese
- A polymorphism of C-to-T substitution at -31 IL1B is associated with the risk of advanced gastric adenocarcinoma in a Japanese population