Shape of the relapse curve and long‐term abstinence among untreated smokers
University of Vermont · University of Vermont Medical Center
Abstract
To describe the relapse curve and rate of long-term prolonged abstinence among smokers who try to quit without treatment. METHOD: Systematic literature review. DATA SOURCES: Cochrane Reviews, Dissertation Abstracts, Excerpt Medica, Medline, Psych Abstracts and US Center for Disease Control databases plus bibliographies of articles and requests of scientists. STUDY SELECTION: Prospective studies of self-quitters or studies that included a no-treatment control group. DATA EXTRACTION: Two reviewers independently extracted data in a non-blind manner. DATA SYNTHESIS: The number of studies was too small and the data too heterogeneous for meta-analysis or other statistical techniques.
There is a paucity of studies reporting relapse curves of self-quitters. The existing eight relapse curves from two studies of self-quitters and five no-treatment control groups indicate most relapse occurs in the first 8 days. These relapse curves were heterogeneous even when the final outcome was made similar. In terms of prolonged abstinence rates, a prior summary of 10 self-quitting studies, two other studies of self-quitters and three no-treatment control groups indicate 3-5% of self-quitters achieve prolonged abstinence for 6-12 month after a given quit attempt.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 62
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Abstinence
- Smoking cessation
- Psychological intervention
- Relapse prevention
- Medicine
- Meta-analysis
- MEDLINE
- Psychology
- Good health and well-being