| Literature DB >> 34069350 |
Kristina Schnitzer1,2,3, Sarah Jones1, Jennifer H K Kelley1,4, Hilary A Tindle5,6, Nancy A Rigotti1,3,4,7, Gina R Kruse1,3,7.
Abstract
(1) Background: COVID-19 has substantially altered individual environments and behaviors. We aim to explore the impact of COVID-19 on the smoking behavior of individuals trying to quit tobacco. (2)Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Transactional Model of Stress; qualitative interviews; smoking cessation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069350 PMCID: PMC8158767 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Proposed mechanism of COVID-19 impact on tobacco use.
COVID-19 impacts and reactions—participant quotes.
| COVID-19 Impacts | Experience | Tobacco Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| Change in routine | “So, my everything is upside down now. I’m not going to work, the kids aren’t going to school. They’re doing everything online, so we’re all home all the time. So, yeah, basically everything about my schedule and routine is completely different.” Female, PA | “It just gives me a lot more downtime. It definitely gives me time in my own mind and my own thoughts. So, I mean, just again, stresses that come on, and you start contemplating these other problems and don’t have this, can’t have that, can’t afford this… then you start smoking.” Male, MA |
| Isolation—social | “It makes me feel isolated a lot of times. When I do wish I had someone that could come over and spend some time with me but I don’t want them to come over because I don’t want to get exposed because I don’t know what they’re doing outside of my house and stuff. My parents haven’t been able to come over like they used to because they’re in their 70s.” Female, TN | “I used to always be outside and in public and I’m a people person. I’m a hugger, you know what I mean? That has killed me. That personal human touch. That stresses me out and makes me want to go smoke.” Female, MA |
| Isolation—environment | “Staying pretty much at home has bothered me… The way you got to stay in. Nothing’s moving. I’m losing a lot of work over it.” Male, PA | Quit smoking Male, MA Female, TN |
| Employment | “Absolutely nothing at all [I can do] to get any kind of income to keep my business afloat. Nothing. I mean there’s nothing I can do right now. Like everybody else, I’m just sitting in the house waiting for it to pass.” Female, PA | “Well, prior to all this… I would go to work. And I worked 10 h shifts. I never once smoked at work. I’m not a person to go to lunch and have a cigarette or say I’m going to have a smoke break. I don’t do that, and that was a big part of the reason, I think, that I smoked such a small amount. And now that I’m home, I find it’s almost something to do. I work from home, but on my lunch break I’ll go outside and smoke a cigarette. And I get super mad at myself, and I do it anyway.” Female, MA |
| Finances | “Well, [I have] no income because I don’t get to go to work or look for a job because there’s not many jobs open right now and [I don’t] leave the premises because we could infect other people if we leave.” Male, TN | Increased smoking Male, MA Male, MA Female, PA |
| Boredom | “Oh, I mean, we can’t do anything. We can’t go anywhere unless it is doctor-related or store-related to grab something. So I mean, with everything shut down, there’s nothing you can do. You can’t go anywhere. And it’s just so you can only sit home and do so much that you’re just extremely bored.” Female, TN | “Well, I did really good for a while. I mean, I just need a cigarette because there’s nothing else to do.” Female, PA |
| Cravings/Triggers | “The other thing; my boyfriend smokes, and he smokes a lot, so it’s like… because I’m constantly around it, it’s a trigger for me.” Female, MA | Increased smoking Female, MA Female, PA |
| Mood/Stress | “I would say distress. I’m out of work, spending home with kids, my wife. My wife’s not working, the homeschooling. There was a long period of time with the way the weather was; you really couldn’t do anything outside, so we were doing project inside, and that gets stale… It’s a lot more stressful. I would say in even thinking and talking about it right now, [it’s] a little more stressful.” Male, MA | “It’s made me smoke more. It’s been nerve-wracking going through this… So I’ve smoked more, not knowing the end result of what’s going to become of all this.” Female, PA |
Figure 2Impact of COVID-19 on a smoking trajectory through mediating processes as outlined by the Transactional Model of Stress. Figure adapted from Glanz et al. [23], based on the models proposed by Lazarus, Cohen, Folkman, and Moscowitz [20,21,22].