Authors
Jafar Bakhshaie, Paulina A Kulesz, Lorra Garey, Kirsten J Langdon, Michael S Businelle, Adam M Leventhal, Matthew W Gallagher, Norman B Schmidt, Kara Manning, Renee Goodwin, Michael J Zvolensky
Publication date
2018/1
Journal
Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
Volume
86
Issue
1
Pages
69
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Objective
Prevailing theory and research suggests the psychological and physiological discomfort associated with tobacco withdrawal may play a formative role in the risk of cessation failure. Yet, research elucidating cognitive-affective vulnerability characteristics that contribute to increased tobacco withdrawal severity during periods of planned abstinence is highly limited. In the current study, we explored whether smokers with greater reductions of Anxiety Sensitivity (AS) and dysphoria during a smoking cessation intervention would experience less severe postquit tobacco withdrawal.
Method
Specifically, the interactive effect of change (from preintervention baseline to quit day) in AS and dysphoria in relation to postquit withdrawal severity (quit day through 12 weeks postquit) was examined among treatment-seeking adult smokers enrolled in a smoking cessation trial (N= 198; 55.3% female; 86.8% Caucasian; M …
Total citations
2018201920202021202265511
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