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Are tobacco dependence and withdrawal related amongst heavy smokers? Relevance to conceptualizations of dependence

Authors :
Daniel M. Bolt
Jessica W. Cook
Wei-Yin Loh
Tanya R. Schlam
Timothy B. Baker
Stevens S. Smith
Megan E. Piper
Source :
Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 121:909-921
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2012.

Abstract

Measured tobacco dependence is typically only modestly related to tobacco withdrawal severity among regular smokers making a quit attempt. The weak association between dependence and withdrawal is notable because it conflicts with core theories of dependence and because both measures predict cessation outcomes, suggesting they both index a common dependence construct. This study used data from a smoking cessation comparative effectiveness trial (N = 1504) to characterize relations of tobacco dependence with craving and negative affect withdrawal symptoms using multiple dependence measures and analytic methods to detect both additive and interactive effects and to determine whether withdrawal meaningfully mediates the influence of dependence on smoking cessation. We conclude: (a) Although univariate analyses suggest dependence and withdrawal measures are only modestly interrelated, more powerful analytic techniques show they are, in fact, meaningfully related and their shared variance is associated with cessation likelihood; (b) there are clear differences between craving and negative affective withdrawal symptoms, with the former more related to smoking heaviness and the latter related to trait measures of negative affect; moreover, craving more strongly mediates dependence effects on cessation; and (c) both craving and negative affect withdrawal symptoms are strongly related to a pattern of regular smoking that is sensitive to the passage of time and powerfully affected by smoking cues. These findings support models that accord an important role for associative processes and withdrawal symptoms, especially craving, in drug dependence. The findings also support the use of withdrawal variables as criteria for the evaluation of dependence measures.

Details

ISSN :
19391846 and 0021843X
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Abnormal Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ede1aef9efccb6e44963920f211647ce