Article

Feasibility of an exercise counseling intervention for depressed women smokers

Details

Citation

Vickers KS, Patten CA, Lewis BA, Clark MM, Ussher M, Ebbert JO, Croghan IT, Decker PA, Hathaway J, Marcus BH & Hurt RD (2009) Feasibility of an exercise counseling intervention for depressed women smokers. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 11 (8), pp. 985-995. https://doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntp101

Abstract
Introduction: Depressive symptoms negatively impact smoking abstinence. However, few interventions have been targeted to smokers with current depression. Exercise improves mood and may benefit depressed smokers. This pilot study investigated the feasibility of an exercise intervention for depressed female smokers (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale [CES-D] score ≥ 16). Methods: Participants (M = 41 years, 98% White) were randomized to 10 weeks of individually delivered exercise counseling (n = 30) or a health education contact control condition (n = 30). All participants received nicotine patch therapy and behavioral counseling for smoking cessation. Results: The intervention was feasible as indicated by ability to recruit participants, exercise counseling session attendance (M = 7.6 of 10 sessions attended), and significant increase in exercise frequency and stage of change from baseline to end of treatment (EOT) (Week 10). Participant attrition rate was 35% by Week 10 but did not differ significantly between groups. Smoking abstinence rates at Week 10, using intention-to-treat analysis, were 17% for exercise counseling participants and 23% for health education participants (p = .75). Discussion: An exercise counseling intervention was found to be feasible for depressed women smokers. More intensive intervention may be needed to increase smoking abstinence rates, and methods should be refined to reduce participant burden and attrition.

Journal
Nicotine and Tobacco Research: Volume 11, Issue 8

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2009
Publication date online18/06/2009
Date accepted by journal27/03/2009
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28820
ISSN1462-2203
eISSN1469-994X

People (1)

Professor Michael Ussher

Professor Michael Ussher

Professor of Behavioural Medicine, Institute for Social Marketing