A preliminary study of cigarette smoking in female orofacial pain patients.
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Abstract | :
The relationship between behavior (eg, diet, exercise, substance use) and the functioning of chronic-pain patients, including orofacial-pain patients, is poorly understood. This preliminary study examined cigarette smoking and both pain-related and psychological functioning in female orofacial-pain patients. Correlates of intentions to quit smoking were also explored. There were 48 participants in this cross-sectional study. Smokers reported significantly less self-control over pain (d = .66), lower general activity levels (d = .52), more fatigue (d = .80), and poorer sleep quality (d = .53) than non-smokers. The mean effect size for all dependent variables was .49 (range, .33-.80) with the smallest and largest effect found for negative mood and fatigue, respectively. More positive attitudes toward smoking cessation independently predicted stronger intentions to quit (β = .52, p = .03). Findings suggest smoking is significantly associated with pain-related and psychological functioning in female orofacial-pain patients. Smoking-cessation treatment for these patients should include motivational interviewing techniques directed toward attitudinal change. |
| Year of Publication | :
0
|
| Journal | :
Behavioral medicine (Washington, D.C.)
|
| Volume | :
39
|
| Issue | :
3
|
| Number of Pages | :
73-9
|
| Date Published | :
2013
|
| ISSN Number | :
0896-4289
|
| URL | :
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08964289.2012.731439
|
| DOI | :
10.1080/08964289.2012.731439
|
| Short Title | :
Behav Med
|
| Download citation |