Some smokers have safety and cost concerns about nicotine replacement therapy which discourage its use. We recruited 56 young adult light smokers to read detailed descriptions of a hybrid nicotine replacement therapy, a prescription drug treatment, scheduled reduced smoking, and a menu of self-help tactics. Participants listed five reasons smokers might reject each strategy. An emergent-category content analysis classified each response with a high degree of inter-rater reliability. Only one-third of 32 concerns were strategy-specific; the majority focused on the general difficulty of quitting. Most prevalent were “continued cravings,” “addiction too strong,” “takes too long,” and “won’t work.” These and other concerns reflect conceptual obstacles to be surmounted in smoking-cessation interventions.
CITATION STYLE
Ryan, M. P., & Hinojosa, J. J. (2015). Conceptual obstacles to making use of four smoking-cessation strategies: What reasons do light smokers give for rejecting strategies? Health Psychology Open, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/2055102915624928
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.