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Am J Health Promot ; : 8901171241234136, 2024 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38356272

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Weight concern is a barrier to smoking cessation. We examined the impact of weight concern on post-cessation weight gain, abstinence and program engagement. DESIGN: Randomized-controlled trial. SETTING: Telephone-based and group-based intervention sessions. SUBJECTS: 305 participants were randomized and analyzed. INTERVENTION: Participants were randomized to receive a self-guided intervention, a weight loss intervention, or a weight stability intervention prior to all receiving the same smoking cessation intervention. MEASURES: Level of weight concern on three measures, point-prevalence abstinence, weight change, and session attendance at 12 months. ANALYSIS: Continuous and discrete outcomes were compared between weight-concerned and non-weight-concerned participants using two-sample t-tests and chi-square tests respectively. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in weight change (range: +1.77, -1.91 kg) when comparing weight-concerned and non-weight-concerned participants. Point-prevalence abstinence ranged from 36% to 64%, with no differences by condition based on level of weight concern. There were no significant differences in session attendance by weight concern (Weight sessions: 50-70%, Smoking cessation sessions: 41-56%, Booster sessions: 28-45%). Weight concern, on all measures, significantly decreased between screening and 2 months (after the weight management intervention), for most of the comparisons made overall and by condition. CONCLUSION: It may not be necessary to screen for weight concerns in smoking cessation and/or post-cessation weight management programs, as the trial interventions were beneficial regardless of weight concern.

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