PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Smokers' cognitive and behavioural reactions during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic: Findings from the 2020 ITC Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey.

  • Shannon Gravely,
  • Lorraine V Craig,
  • K Michael Cummings,
  • Janine Ouimet,
  • Ruth Loewen,
  • Nadia Martin,
  • Janet Chung-Hall,
  • Pete Driezen,
  • Sara C Hitchman,
  • Ann McNeill,
  • Andrew Hyland,
  • Anne C K Quah,
  • Richard J O'Connor,
  • Ron Borland,
  • Mary E Thompson,
  • Christian Boudreau,
  • Geoffrey T Fong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252427
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0252427

Abstract

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IntroductionCOVID-19 is primarily a respiratory illness, and smoking adversely impacts the respiratory and immune systems; this confluence may therefore incentivize smokers to quit. The present study, conducted in four high-income countries during the first global wave of COVID-19, examined the association between COVID-19 and: (1) thoughts about quitting smoking; (2) changes in smoking (quit attempt, reduced or increased smoking, or no change); and (3) factors related to a positive change (making a quit attempt or reducing smoking) based on an adapted framework of the Health Belief Model.MethodsThis cross-sectional study included 6870 adult smokers participating in the Wave 3 (2020) ITC Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey conducted in Australia, Canada, England, and United States (US). These four countries had varying responses to the pandemic by governments and public health, ranging from advising voluntary social distancing to implementing national and subnational staged lockdowns. Considering these varying responses, and the differences in the number of confirmed cases and deaths (greatest in England and the US and lowest in Australia), smoking behaviours related to COVID-19 may have differed between countries. Other factors that may be related to changes in smoking because of COVID-19 were also explored (e.g., sociodemographics, nicotine dependence, perceptions about personal and general risks of smoking on COVID-19). Regression analyses were conducted on weighted data.ResultsOverall, 46.7% of smokers reported thinking about quitting because of COVID-19, which differed by country (pConclusionsThough nearly half of smokers reported thinking about quitting because of COVID-19, the vast majority did not change their smoking behaviour. Smokers were more likely to try and quit or reduce their smoking if they had greater concern about susceptibility and severity of COVID-19 related to smoking. Smokers in Australia were least likely to reduce or try to quit smoking, which could be related to the significantly lower impact of COVID-19 during the early phase of the pandemic relative to the other countries.