Long-Term Effects of Smoking Cessation on Depressive Symptoms, Resilience, Coping Skills, and Serotonin

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초록

There are many studies on how smoking cigarettes is harmful to health, but research on how smoking cessation improves mental health is insufficient. The purpose of this study was to examine long-term effects of smoking cessation on depressive symptoms, resilience, coping skills, and serotonin levels in Korean adults. This was a longitudinal study that followed up on periodically participants for 2 years after the initial smoking cessation intervention. A total of 164 smokers participated within this study. Of these, 15 maintained smoking cessation for 504.93 +/- 182.82 days. On the other hand, 148 participants failed to maintain smoking cessation. Depressive symptoms decreased and resilience increased significantly over 2 years in the 15 abstainers. Smoking cessation, in total, decreased depressive symptoms by 32.9% (p = .015) and also increased resilience by 37.5% (p = .012). Smoking cessation also explained for 9% of total positive interpretation at the 1-year follow-up, and 7.3% of total self-criticism at the 2-year follow-up. Serum serotonin did not change over the course of 2 years in both abstainers and smokers but did decrease in the short-term for those who maintained smoking cessation. Platelet serotonin increased over 6 months among smokers.

키워드

Smoking cessationResilienceSerotoninDepressive symptomsCoping skillsNICOTINEASSOCIATIONANXIETY
제목
Long-Term Effects of Smoking Cessation on Depressive Symptoms, Resilience, Coping Skills, and Serotonin
저자
Lee, Eun Jin
DOI
10.1007/s11126-019-09689-2
발행일
2020-06
유형
Article
저널명
Psychiatric Quarterly
91
2
페이지
263 ~ 271