Literature DB >> 21596723

Scientific research and corporate influence: smoking, mental illness, and the tobacco industry.

Laura Hirshbein1.   

Abstract

Mentally ill individuals have always smoked at high rates and continue to do so, despite public health efforts to encourage smoking cessation. In the last half century, the tobacco industry became interested in this connection, and conducted and supported psychiatric and basic science research on the mental health implications of smoking, long before most mental health professionals outside the industry investigated this issue. Initially, representatives of tobacco industry research organizations supported genetics and psychosomatic research to try to disprove findings that smoking causes lung cancer. Tobacco industry research leaders engaged with investigators because of shared priorities and interests in the brain effects of nicotine. By the 1980s, collaborative funding programs and individual company research and development teams engaged in intramural and extramural basic science studies on the neuropharmacology of nicotine. When mental health researchers outside the industry became interested in the issue of the mentally ill and smoking in the mid-1990s, they increasingly explained it in terms of a disease of nicotine addiction. Both the idea that smoking/nicotine does something positive for the mentally ill and the conclusion that it is the result of nicotine dependence have the potential to support corporate agendas (tobacco or pharmaceutical).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21596723      PMCID: PMC3376000          DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/jrr019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci        ISSN: 0022-5045            Impact factor:   2.088


  6 in total

Review 1.  Cannabis regulatory science: risk-benefit considerations for mental disorders.

Authors:  Jacob T Borodovsky; Alan J Budney
Journal:  Int Rev Psychiatry       Date:  2018-05-29

2.  Politics, profit, and psychiatric diagnosis: a case study of tobacco use disorder.

Authors:  Laura D Hirshbein
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2014-09-11       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Financial Conflicts of Interest and Stance on Tobacco Harm Reduction: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Yogi H Hendlin; Manali Vora; Jesse Elias; Pamela M Ling
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Online tobacco marketing among US adolescent sexual, gender, racial, and ethnic minorities.

Authors:  Samir Soneji; Kristin E Knutzen; Andy S L Tan; Meghan Bridgid Moran; JaeWon Yang; James Sargent; Kelvin Choi
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2019-03-22       Impact factor: 3.913

Review 5.  The environmental externalities of tobacco manufacturing: A review of tobacco industry reporting.

Authors:  Yogi Hale Hendlin; Stella A Bialous
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2019-03-09       Impact factor: 5.129

Review 6.  Cigarette Smoking and Schizophrenia: Etiology, Clinical, Pharmacological, and Treatment Implications.

Authors:  Jack Baichao Ding; Kevin Hu
Journal:  Schizophr Res Treatment       Date:  2021-12-13
  6 in total

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