The Association of Cigarette Smoking With Depression and Anxiety: A Systematic Review
University of Bristol · UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies
Abstract
Many studies report a positive association between smoking and mental illness. However, the literature remains mixed regarding the direction of this association. We therefore conducted a systematic review evaluating the association of smoking and depression and/or anxiety in longitudinal studies.
Studies were identified by searching PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science and were included if they: (1) used human participants, (2) were longitudinal, (3) reported primary data, (4) had smoking as an exposure and depression and/or anxiety as an outcome, or (5) had depression and/or anxiety as the exposure and smoking as an outcome.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 177
Authors
4- MFMeg FluhartyCorresponding
University of Bristol, UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies
- AEAmy E. Taylor
UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies, University of Bristol
- MGMeryem Grabski
University of Bristol, UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies
- MRMarcus R. Munafò
University of Bristol, UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies
Topics & keywords
- Anxiety
- Depression (economics)
- Association (psychology)
- Mendelian randomization
- Clinical psychology
- Psychiatry
- Mental health
- Medicine
- Good health and well-being