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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Smoking and weight change after new health diagnoses in older adults.

Patricia S. Keenan
- 09 Feb 2009 - 
- Vol. 169, Iss: 3, pp 237-242
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TLDR
Across a range of health conditions, new diagnoses can serve as a window of opportunity that prompts older adults to change health habits, in particular, to quit smoking.
Abstract
Background Smoking and patterns of diet and activity are the 2 leading underlying causes of death in the United States, yet the factors that prompt individuals to adopt healthier habits are not well understood. Methods This study was undertaken to determine whether individuals who have experienced recent adverse health events are more likely to quit smoking or to lose weight than those without recent events using Health and Retirement Study panel survey data for 20 221 overweight or obese individuals younger than 75 years and 7764 smokers from 1992 to 2000. Results In multivariate analyses, adults with recent diagnoses of stroke, cancer, lung disease, heart disease, or diabetes mellitus were 3.2 times more likely to quit smoking than were individuals without new diagnoses ( P P P Conclusions Across a range of health conditions, new diagnoses can serve as a window of opportunity that prompts older adults to change health habits, in particular, to quit smoking. Quality improvement efforts targeting secondary as well as primary prevention through the health care system are likely well founded.

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Citations
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Residential surrounding green, air pollution, traffic noise and self-perceived general health.

TL;DR: Ass associations with surrounding green and air pollution generally remained, but attenuated, and joint odds ratios (JOR) of combined exposure to air pollution, rail-traffic noise and decreased surrounding green were higher than the odds ratios of single-exposure models.
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Role of New Diagnosis, Social Isolation, and Depression in Older Adults’ Smoking Cessation

TL;DR: The influence of a diagnosis of chronic illness, social isolation, and depression on smoking cessation among the most recent cohort of older smokers who were representative of U.S. Medicare beneficiaries is examined to motivate and help older adults quit (or reduce) smoking.
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Impact of a brief motivational smoking cessation intervention the Get PHIT randomized controlled trial.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated whether biologically-based health-risk feedback is more effective than standard interventions in increasing smokers' motivation to quit and their long-term abstinence and found no support for adding a personalized health risk assessment emphasizing lung health and CO exposure to generic cessation advice and counseling for community-based smokers not otherwise seeking treatment.
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The Effect of Stability and Change in Health Behaviors on Trajectories of Body Mass Index in Older Americans: A 14-Year Longitudinal Study

TL;DR: In older adults, smoking and PA, and changes thereof, vary in their long-term effect on trajectories of BMI, essential for the design of smoking cessation, physical activityPA, and weight-control interventions in older adults.
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Smoking cessation behaviors among older U.S. adults

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that few older adults, across most levels of characteristics examined, successfully quit smoking, underscoring the importance of assisting smoking cessation efforts.
References
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