PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study reveals changes in cigarette smoking during the COVID-19 pandemic

Stress caused some individuals to smoke more, whereas COVID-related worries led others to cut down or quit

2021-06-08
(Press-News.org) BOSTON - Last year, people who smoked had a variety of responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, with some increasing their smoking to help them cope and others quitting to potentially lessen their vulnerability to COVID-19. That's the finding of new research published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine and conducted by investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

"Studies have shown that alcohol and opioid use increased during the pandemic, but little is known about how smokers responded," says lead author Nancy A. Rigotti, MD, director of MGH's Tobacco Research and Treatment Center and professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. "They might have increased their smoking due to stress and boredom. On the other hand, the fear of catching COVID might have led them to cut down or quit smoking. In fact, we found that both happened, and we examined reasons for both outcomes."

Rigotti and her colleagues analyzed survey responses from 694 current and former daily smokers--the average age was 53 years, 40% were male, and 78% were white--who had been hospitalized before the COVID-19 pandemic and had previously participated in a smoking cessation clinical trial at hospitals in Boston, Nashville and Pittsburgh. The survey was administered from May to July 2020.

Sixty-eight percent of respondents believed that smoking increases the risk of contracting COVID-19 or having a more severe case. This perceived risk was higher in Massachusetts (where COVID-19 had already surged) than in Pennsylvania and Tennessee. Higher perceived COVID-19 risk was associated with a higher interest in quitting smoking.

During the pandemic, 32% of respondents increased their smoking, 37% decreased their smoking, and 31% made no change. Those who increased their smoking tended to perceive more stress.

Also, 11% of respondents who smoked in January 2020 (before the pandemic) had quit smoking by the time the survey was administered (an average of six months later), while 28% of former smokers relapsed. Higher perceived COVID-19 risk was associated with a higher likelihood of quitting and a lower likelihood of relapse.

"Even before the pandemic, tobacco smoking was the leading preventable cause of death in the United States. COVID-19 has given smokers yet another good reason to stop smoking," says Rigotti. "Physicians, health care systems and public health agencies have an opportunity to educate smokers about their special vulnerability to COVID-19 and urge them to use this time to quit smoking for good."

"These messages will be more impactful if they guide smokers to programs like tobacco quitlines, which are available in every U.S. state and provide free counseling and medication to quit smoking," adds study co-leader Hilary Tindle, MD, MPH, founding director of ViTAL, the Vanderbilt Center for Tobacco, Addiction, and Lifestyle at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Smokers can access tobacco quitlines by calling 1-800-QUIT-NOW. Smokers can also visit ICOVIDQuit.org to view short videos of peers who successfully quit smoking during the pandemic.

INFORMATION:

Funding for the study was provided by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health.

MGH co-authors include Yuchiao Chang, PhD, Susan Regan, PhD, Jennifer H.K. Kelley, DNP, Douglas E. Levy, PhD, and Daniel E. Singer, MD. Other co-authors include Scott Lee, MD, PhD, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and Esa Davis, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

About the Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The Mass General Research Institute conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the nation, with annual research operations of more than $1 billion and comprises more than 9,500 researchers working across more than 30 institutes, centers and departments. In August 2020, Mass General was named #6 in the U.S. News & World Report list of "America's Best Hospitals."



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Feeling hot and bothered? It's complicated

Feeling hot and bothered? Its complicated
2021-06-08
Rising temperatures are increasingly affecting the quality of life in many regions, setting new challenges for architects, urban planners and healthcare systems. Researchers at KAUST have analyzed discomfort due to outdoor heat across Saudi Arabia and neighboring regions to help understand and combat the problem. "Living conditions in the Kingdom have been particularly affected by the changing climate," says Hari Dasari, first author of the paper. He also emphasizes the unique challenges facing the Hajj pilgrimage visits by several million people each year. Between 2014 and 2018, the Hajj occurred in summer months when the ...

UNF archaeology uncovering lost Indigenous NE Florida settlement of Sarabay

UNF archaeology uncovering lost Indigenous NE Florida settlement of Sarabay
2021-06-08
UNF archaeology researchers are uncovering the lost Indigenous NE Florida settlement of Sarabay Jacksonville, Fla. - The University of North Florida archaeology team is now fairly confident they have located the lost Indigenous northeast Florida community of Sarabay, a settlement mentioned in both French and Spanish documents dating to the 1560s but had not been discovered until now. The type and amounts of Indigenous pottery the team is finding combined with the type and dates for European artifacts as well as cartographic map evidence strongly supports this location as the late 16th/early 17th century Mocama settlement. The researchers have opened large excavation blocks with many exciting ...

Tracking RNA through space and time

Tracking RNA through space and time
2021-06-08
The "miracle of life" is most obvious at the very beginning: When the fertilized egg cell divides by means of furrows into blastomeres, envelops itself in an amniotic sac, and unfolds to form germ layers. When the blastomeres begin to differentiate into different cells - and when they eventually develop into a complete organism. "We wanted to find out whether the later differences between the various cells are already partly hard-wired into the fertilized egg cell," says Dr. Jan Philipp Junker, who heads the Quantitative Developmental Biology Lab at the ...

Femtosecond spectroscopy and first-principles calculations shed light on compositional dependence of

2021-06-08
Researchers from Skoltech and Ludwig Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Germany have studied the fundamental properties of halide perovskite nanocrystals, a promising class of optoelectronic materials. Using a combination of theory and experiment, they were able to show and explain an intricate connection between composition, light-induced lattice dynamics, and stability of the materials. The paper was published in the journal Nature Communications. Perovskite nanocrystals (PNCs) are semiconductor nanocrystals that, thanks to their unique properties, have found a number of applications in optoelectronics, for instance, in lasers and LEDs. PNCs have a much higher photoluminescence quantum ...

To prevent delirium, increase mobility, connection and sleep

2021-06-08
Accelerated cognitive decline in patients with and without existing dementia is one of the most disturbing outcomes of hospitalizations for older adults, affecting at least 2.6 million Americans every year. But the condition, known as delirium, is believed to be preventable in up to 40 percent of hospital-acquired cases, and researchers at UC San Franciso wanted to see if simple tweaks, like avoiding nighttime interruptions to promote sleep, nixing certain prescription drugs, and promoting exercise and social engagement, could decrease its incidence. In a June 8, 2021, study in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the researchers followed approximately 22,700 inpatients aged 50 and ...

Balancing speech intelligibility, face covering effectiveness in classrooms

Balancing speech intelligibility, face covering effectiveness in classrooms
2021-06-08
MELVILLE, N.Y., June 8, 2021 -- As face coverings have become more and more ubiquitous during the coronavirus pandemic, their effects on nearly every aspect of life have been called into question. For one, a better understanding of the impacts of face masks and shields on acoustic transmission in classrooms could help optimize educational settings. During the 180th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, which will be held virtually June 8-10, Laura and Rich Ruhala, from Kennesaw State University, will talk about how various types of face coverings may affect ...

Teaching drones to hear screams from catastrophe victims

Teaching drones to hear screams from catastrophe victims
2021-06-08
MELVILLE, N.Y., June 8, 2021 -- In a disaster, time is of the essence when searching for potential victims who may be difficult to find. Unmanned aerial vehicles make the perfect platform for state-of-the-art technology allowing emergency crews to find those in need and provide situational awareness over a large area. During the 180th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, which will be held virtually June 8-10, Macarena Varela, from Fraunhofer FKIE, will describe how a system using an array of microphones and advanced processing techniques could be a lifesaver for disaster victims. The session, "Bearing Estimation of Screams Using a Volumetric Microphone Array Mounted on a UAV," will take place Tuesday, June 8, at 10:35 a.m. Eastern U.S. During ...

A vital tool to study virus evolution in the test tube

A vital tool to study virus evolution in the test tube
2021-06-08
Variants of viruses, such as that causing COVID-19, can now be quickly studied in the laboratory, even before they emerge in nature and become a major public health challenge. The University of Queensland, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, Monash University, and Queensland Health have developed a technology to manipulate viruses synthetically allowing rapid analysis and mapping of new potential virus variants. UQ's lead researcher Professor Alexander Khromykh said the technology was ideal for use during a global pandemic such as COVID-19. "This technique should give us the ability to answer questions about whether potential virus variants are susceptible to a particular drug or vaccine, even before they emerge ...

New population of blue whales discovered with help of bomb detectors

2021-06-08
Blue whales may be the biggest animals in the world, but they're also some of the hardest to find. Not only are they rare (it's estimated that less than 0.15 per cent of blue whales in the Southern Hemisphere survived whaling), they're also reclusive by nature and can cover vast areas of ocean. But now, a team of scientists led by UNSW Sydney are confident they've discovered a new population of pygmy blue whales, the smallest subspecies of blue whales, in the Indian Ocean. And it was the whales' powerful singing - recorded by underwater bomb detectors - that gave them away. "We've found a whole new group of pygmy blue whales right in the middle of the Indian Ocean," says UNSW Professor Tracey Rogers, marine ecologist and senior author of the study. "We ...

Preclinical study suggests new approach to reduce COVID-19 death among the elderly

2021-06-08
MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (06/08/2021) -- New research from the University of Minnesota Medical School and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic reveals a possible new approach to preventing death and severe disease in elderly people infected with SARS-CoV-2. The researchers demonstrated in a preclinical study that senolytic drugs significantly reduced mortality upon infection from a beta-coronavirus closely related to SARS-CoV-2 in older mice. The study published in Science was co-led by Laura Niedernhofer, MD, PhD and Paul Robbins, PhD, both professors in the Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Biophysics and co-directors of the Institute on the Biology of Aging and Metabolism at the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

BioChatter: making large language models accessible for biomedical research

Grass surfaces drastically reduce drone noise making the way for soundless city skies

Extent of microfibre pollution from textiles to be explored at new research hub

Many Roads Lead to… the embryo

Dining out with San Francisco’s coyotes

What’s the mechanism behind behavioral side effects of popular weight loss drugs?

How employee trust in AI drives performance and adoption

Does sleep apnea treatment influence patients’ risk of getting into car accidents?

Do minimum wage hikes negatively impact students’ summer employment?

Exposure to stress during early pregnancy affects offspring into adulthood

Curious blue rings in trees and shrubs reveal cold summers of the past — potentially caused by volcanic eruptions

New frontiers in organic chemistry: Synthesis of a promising mushroom-derived compound

Biodegradable nylon precursor produced through artificial photosynthesis

GenEditScan: novel k-mer analysis tool based on next-generation sequencing for foreign DNA detection in genome-edited products

Survey: While most Americans use a device to monitor their heart, few share that data with their doctor

Dolphins use a 'fat taste' system to get their mother’s milk

Clarifying the mechanism of coupled plasma fluctuations using simulations

Here’s what’s causing the Great Salt Lake to shrink, according to PSU study

Can DNA-nanoparticle motors get up to speed with motor proteins?

Childhood poverty and/or parental mental illness may double teens’ risk of violence and police contact

Fizzy water might aid weight loss by boosting glucose uptake and metabolism

Muscular strength and good physical fitness linked to lower risk of death in people with cancer

Recommendations for studying the impact of AI on young people's mental health  proposed by Oxford researchers

Trump clusters: How an English lit graduate used AI to make sense of Twitter bios

Empty headed? Largest study of its kind proves ‘bird brain’ is a misnomer

Wild baboons not capable of visual self-awareness when viewing their own reflection

$14 million supports work to diversify human genome research

New study uncovers key mechanism behind learning and memory

Seeing the unseen: New method reveals ’hyperaccessible’ window in freshly replicated DNA

Extreme climate pushed thousands of lakes in West Greenland ‘across a tipping point,’ study finds

[Press-News.org] Study reveals changes in cigarette smoking during the COVID-19 pandemic
Stress caused some individuals to smoke more, whereas COVID-related worries led others to cut down or quit