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http://dx.doi.org/10.15207/JKCS.2018.9.9.285

Association between Smoking Cessation Attempts and Perceived Stress Level: the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2015  

Lee, Yejin (Department of Healthcare Management, Eulji University)
Kim, Ji-yeon (Department of Healthcare Management, Eulji University)
Lee, Ju Hyun (National Institute of Dementia)
Yoo, Ki-Bong (Department of Health Administration, Department of Information & Statistics, Yonsei University)
Noh, Jin-Won (Department of Healthcare Management, Eulji University)
Publication Information
Journal of the Korea Convergence Society / v.9, no.9, 2018 , pp. 285-292 More about this Journal
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to analyze the association of smoking cessation attempts and the perceived stress level and to identify the factors affecting the perceived stress level of quit smoking. The study utilized the 2015 Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and was applied an Ordinal Logistic Regression to examine the association of smoking cessation attempts and perceived stress level. The current smoker those who experience failure in smoking cessation, were more stressful than those who experience success in smoking cessation (OR=1.72, CI;1.41-2.08). This study identified smoking cessation failure as a major psychiatric factor associated with high perceived stress level, and suggests high stress after smoking cessation failure as one of the reasons why smokers do not reach complete smoking cessation. Also, in order to promote smoking cessation, it is needed to have political approach in reducing the psychiatric hurdle like high stress after smoking cessation failure.
Keywords
Perceived stress; Non-smoking policy; Smoking cessation attempts; Smoking cessation success; Smoking cessation failure; Psychiatric factors;
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