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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Cigarette Smoking among Economically Disadvantaged African-American Older Adults in South Los Angeles: Gender Differences.

TLDR
Gender-tailored smoking cessation programs that address drinking for AA men and depression for AA women may help reduce the burden of smoking in AA older adults in economically disadvantaged urban areas.
Abstract
The current study aims to explore gender differences in the risk of cigarette smoking among African-American (AA) older adults who live in economically disadvantaged urban areas of southern Los Angeles. This cross-sectional study enrolled 576 older AA adults (age range between 65 and 96 years) who were residing in Service Planning Area 6 (SPA 6), one of the most economically challenged areas in southern Los Angeles. All participants had cardiometabolic disease (CMD). Data were collected using structured face-to-face interviews. Demographic factors (age and gender), socioeconomic status (educational attainment and financial difficulty), health (number of comorbid medical conditions and depressive symptoms), and health behaviors (current alcohol drinking and current smoking) were measured. Logistic regressions were used to analyze the data without and with interaction terms between gender and current drinking, depressive symptoms, and financial difficulty. AA men reported more smoking than AA women (25.3% versus 9.3%; p < 0.05). Drinking showed a stronger association with smoking for AA men than AA women. Depressive symptoms, however, showed stronger effects on smoking for AA women than AA men. Gender did not interact with financial difficulty with regard to current smoking. As AA older men and women differ in psychological and behavioral determinants of cigarette smoking, gender-specific smoking cessation interventions for AA older adults who live in economically deprived urban areas may be more successful than interventions and programs that do not consider gender differences in determinants of smoking. Gender-tailored smoking cessation programs that address drinking for AA men and depression for AA women may help reduce the burden of smoking in AA older adults in economically disadvantaged urban areas. Given the non-random sampling, there is a need for replication of these findings in future studies.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Associations between Polypharmacy, Self-Rated Health, and Depression in African American Older Adults; Mediators and Moderators.

TL;DR: There is a need for preventing inappropriate polypharmacy in AA older adults, particularly when addressing poor SRH and depression inAA older women with multimorbidity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obesity and Polypharmacy among African American Older Adults: Gender as the Moderator and Multimorbidity as the Mediator.

TL;DR: There is a need for screening for inappropriate polypharmacy in AA older women with obesity and associated multimorbidity, suggesting that gender moderates such association.
Journal ArticleDOI

Health-Related Quality of Life of Economically Disadvantaged African American Older Adults: Age and Gender Differences.

TL;DR: There may be some gender differences in the implications of ageing for the physical HRQoL of AA older adults, and future research should test the effect of age on physical health indicators such as chronic disease as well as cognitive processes involved in the evaluation of own's health in AA men and women.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depression Fully Mediates the Effect of Multimorbidity on Self-Rated Health for Economically Disadvantaged African American Men but Not Women

TL;DR: Gender differences exist in the role of depression as an underlying mechanism behind the effect of multimorbidity on the SRH of economically disadvantaged AA older adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polypharmacy Is Associated with Lower Memory Function in African American Older Adults.

TL;DR: There is a need for screening for memory problems in AA older adults who are exposed to polypharmacy and a need to test the mechanisms by which polypharma is associated with lower levels of cognitive decline.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gender differences in substance use disorders.

TL;DR: The prevalence rates indicate that a diagnosis of substance abuse is not gender specific, and to determine whether gender differences observed over the past 25 years become less demarcated in comparisons of younger cohorts of substance abusers in the future will be interesting.
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The Association of Cigarette Smoking with Depression and Anxiety: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: The literature on the prospective association between smoking and depression and anxiety is inconsistent in terms of the direction of association most strongly supported, suggesting the need for future studies that employ different methodologies, such as Mendelian randomization (MR), which will allow for stronger causal inferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Short Form of the Geriatric Depression Scale: A Comparison With the 30-Item Form:

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the short version of the GDS, like its longer prede cessor, is an effective screening tool in the cognitively intact, however, in a population of subjects with mild DAT, it does not appear to retain its validity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental trajectories of substance use from early adolescence to young adulthood: gender and racial/ethnic differences

TL;DR: Findings from the current study suggest that the critical periods for intervention and prevention of substance use may differ across gender and race/ethnicity, and that future research needs to identify common and unique mechanisms underlying developmental patterns of different forms of substances use.
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