| Literature DB >> 17087825 |
Elin Roddy1, Marilyn Antoniak, John Britton, Andrew Molyneux, Sarah Lewis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smoking is strongly associated with disadvantage and is an important contributor to inequalities in health. Smoking cessation services have been implemented in the UK targeting disadvantaged smokers, but there is little evidence available on how to design services to attract this priority group.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17087825 PMCID: PMC1647276 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Participants interpretations of smoking experiences:
| 'I was about 10. Didn't realise because in them days, smoking wasn't bad for you, it was considered to be good for you, if you smoked Marlboro, kids wanted to be a cowboy, a tough guy, all my heroes smoked, Bogart, Cagney, all had a fag in their mouth........' |
| 'Smoking was good for you when I started.' |
| 'I think it was when I started down pit, everybody, they'd come up and they had a fag straightaway, I just done the same thing.' |
| 'Most people have a coffee, sit down with a cigarette to get their bearings, you stop to think about what you're going to do in the day ...' by the time you've put the fag out you're ready to go out there and challenge every one, it perks you up a bit.' |
| 'You finish washing up and you have a fag, when you have a cup of tea you have a fag, when you sit down and watch Neighbours you have a fag ...' |
| 'I'll be honest with you now, I'm sitting here now and I'm getting really, really sort of agitated! It's like I can't talk to people normally without a cigarette and I know that I'm talking here, but I'm slowly twiddling, my toes are tapping ...' |
| 'If they gave me £50 m, I still couldn't stop, not for £50 m I couldn't.' |
Participants experiences of smoking cessation attempts
| 'It's the stress factors, you're stressed out because you smoke so you smoke more.' |
| 'There are people that you do know who have never touched a cigarette and they die of cancer.' |
| 'You're going to die whether you smoke or not.' |
| 'The mental obsession is there all the time .....you need a fag, you need a fag, want a fag.' |
| 'The first week was terrible because I got really violent .. ..' |
| '...I know when I stop smoking the weight goes on.' |
| 'You go and fetch the paper.....you buy ten fags and hide them because you don't want her to think that you've cracked, you haven't really cracked because you haven't even started, so you're lying to yourself at the start.' |
| 'You keep trying and trying, but you just get fed up because you know what's coming don't you?' |
| 'I know all the statistics, I know all the stuff that's there to know and I'm a strong willed person, anything else I've overcome in my life, massive problems and all the rest of it, but one of the things has been a constant through my life is the smoking, it's that element of .... having tried and failed.' |
| '......okay, it sounds a bit crude but if I've got diarrhoea, all the willpower in the world doesn't stop me from running to the toilet, that's like willpower, I can be determined not to smoke again and I just make myself a failure, and it's not even my failure, it's everybody else outside saying ....you're a weak person for not being able to do this.' |
Access to cigarettes
| '...cigarettes are everywhere, the shelves are full of them, so even if you're giving up, you walk into the supermarket, everyone around you smokes, wherever you go.' |
| 'This is the thing, if you're sat in a pub and somebody says, "I've got some fags here", and they're £2.50 or £3 and you've got to (normally) pay £4 odd, you're going to take them aren't you?' |
| 'I wouldn't buy so many I don't suppose if I'd got to pay full price.' |
Participants interpretation of the attitudes of others to smokers
| 'They look down on you ...get funny looks, like you've committed a crime.' |
| 'I sometimes think we're ...... pariahs because we smoke.' |
| 'I remember I was waiting for a bus, I lit a cigarette up, there was a child there of about 5 or 6 years with his Mum, the child goes, "look what that man's doing Mummy", I thought "ergh".' |
| '....it's non smokers, they're like Born Again Christians, they go on a witch hunt, if they know you smoke' |
| 'It's an addiction, I bet drug users get free stuff ....why don't they give us free stuff?' |
| 'You've got Alcoholics Anonymous, but they don't think about smokers.' |
| 'The Government doesn't want to stop it because of the amount of money they get from the whole country smoking.' |
| 'I was rushed into hospital with a suspected heart attack, he stood at the bottom of the bed, "do you smoke, well stop it".' |
| 'He said "I'm not going to nag at you, count it not as a failure because you went those 12 months, but just keep remembering how good you felt in those 12 months" and he went onto explain and said |
| "go away and think about it, if you ever want to come in...". But the lady (doctor) has never, ever offered me any sort of help just "how many do you smoke?" ....she just upsets me so much ...' |
Participants perceptions of smoking cessation services
| '... we're reasonable intelligent people, we know all the pitfalls, I would like some sort of encouragement or support while packing it in, but it's all the other bit that you have to put up with so that puts you off a little bit, the information bit about it, it puts you off because we've heard it all before' |
| 'To be honest with you I find the more they preach to you about what it does to you, the more I seem to smoke. I know I shouldn't but you just feel that you need one ...' |
| 'You can have far too much of it, and you think "blow it", you let it go in one ear and out the other.' |
| 'I don't know if they'd have me back (if I failed), I don't know if you get second chances with them or third chances!' |
| 'I need some help but you don't know where to go with smoking, because it's legal, you don't know where to go for help and where to ask' |
| 'I don't think I've heard of any (cessation services) to be honest.' |
| 'I can think of lots of people who would like to give up smoking and they've not had a single bit of help and they can't afford to smoke or anything ...' |
| 'They don't know where to go or what to do to get help, they hear about it but the daily business (of living) ... carries on' |
| '... it's really awkward because you've got Mums with young children who can't get out in the evening, then you've got workers who can't get out during the day because you work.' |
Participants perceptions of smoking cessation therapies
| 'I went to the doctors and said, "I want to pack it up", she was looking through the book, says "you can't have the patches, you can't have the chewing gum, you can't have this .." I said "how the hell am I going to stop?".' |
| 'I've heard a few things about the patches, I've heard that they're not much good.' |
| 'About a week I tried, I tried them patches, the inhalers and the chewing gum, but it's the cost of them really, I would have carried it on if it weren't for the cost.' |
| 'For £20, once you've opened it and used it that's it.' |
| 'Cheaper to buy a packet of fags.' |
| 'They're looking at it this way, if you can afford to smoke, you can afford to buy the patches and that's the wrong attitude because blow that for a lark, I'm not paying that sort of money to give up something that I want to do.' |
| '....they need to find something .....that is actually is as strong as the nicotine in cigarettes, if someone can find another fix that's as strong as the one we're already getting, then that will work.' |
| 'I think if it hadn't have been for that outcry about the Zyban, I might have carried on with it but I just left it and that was it.' |
| 'I don't know, if they want me to try that Zyban or something then I'd be a bit scared to take them as well, people have died from taking them or connected to it.' |
| 'I've heard it's got bad side effects ...Someone had strokes on it.' |
| 'I had a friend of mine and he used to smoke 40 a day, he went on that hypnosis, and from that day on he never smoked a cigarette.' |
Participants suggestions for novel approaches to promoting smoking cessation
| 'I think it's you have to advertise that you're giving something..... if you give somebody a 10 p voucher for a can of beans, they'll buy it because it's a voucher.' |
| 'You need something to zap it up, like "it could be you", something to grab your attention.' |
| 'So maybe it should say a bit more, like you say, people like a bargain.' |
| 'I think everything to do with junkies should be designed personally, we're all very, very different.' |
| 'It was addressed to me personally that made me come (to the focus group), I thought "how did they know I smoke?", and I thought "I'll have a look at this, this is interesting"....' |
| 'Small localised groups, I think that's a good idea because there's a chance you'll bump into someone on the street who's going through the thing you're doing, you start to form networks' |
| '.... if every time you smoked a cigarette you got a purple mark on top or your teeth, you know like that stuff where you don't clean your teeth properly when you were a kid ...' |
| '...... a voluntary visit to people in the hospitals who are dying through smoking.' |
| 'If you saw directors of tobacco companies and they weren't smoking, they wouldn't let their kids smoke, if you saw the lifestyle that we pay for them to live in, maybe that would work ...' |